Scholarly
This Guest Post from Phaedra Cress explores the increased acceptance of unethical behavior in scholarly publishing. The post Little White Lies in Healthcare Publishing appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Recent coordinated investigatory journalism articles, along with separate regulatory actions, are squeezing predatory publishers. But are the root causes being addressed? The post Dropping the Hammer — Predatory Publishers Get Pounded by Regulators and the Press appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Peer Review Week 2018 takes place September 10-15. Find out more about the theme, how you can get involved, and what we will be doing to celebrate here on The Scholarly Kitchen in this post by Alice Meadows The post #PeerReviewWeek18 Is Coming! appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
It's that time of the year again - when we add personal travel to our business travel. See what travel tips the Chefs have to offer and please contribute your own! The post Ask The Chefs: What Travel Tips Have Worked For You? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
HighWire's John Sack discusses MECA, a framework for best-practices development in manuscript transfer across systems. The post Guest Post: Manuscript Exchange — What MECA Can Do for the Academic Publishing World — And What it Can’t appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Robert Harington describes how the recent, under the radar launch of the Amazon Global Store is putting local businesses at risk. The post The Oligarchy of Amazon appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
We have had assumptions about the academic book market that probably are just not true. The post Good Data, Bad Data, You Know I’ve Had My Share: Library Book Acquisition Patterns appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Jocelyn Dawson and Rebecca McLeod interview Safiya Noble, author of "Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism". The post Guest Post: Safiya Umoja Noble and the Ethics of Social Justice in Information (Part 2) appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Jocelyn Dawson and Rebecca McLeod interview Safiya Noble, author of "Algorithms of Oppression: How Search Engines Reinforce Racism". The post Guest Post: Safiya Umoja Noble and the Ethics of Social Justice in Information (Part 1) appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
An author found that the relevant journals were unwilling to publish an article of historical research that found evidence for a surprising and somewhat controversial proposition about the founding of the University of Utah. So what did she decide to do with her article? Something rather unusual, it turns out. The post One Author’s Novel…