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Animal Ethics Biosafety Human Research Ethics Research Integrity

(Australia) Predatory journals undermining PhD by publication route – Times Higher Education (John Ross | July 2021)

Posted by Dr Gary Allen in Research Integrity on August 3, 2021
Keywords: Australia, Institutional responsibilities, Journal, Publication ethics, Research integrity, Research results, Supervision

The Linked Original Item was Posted On July 7, 2021

Cartoon of concept of a university building

Australian university limits journals accepted for doctorates amid mounting concern among academics

Academics have expressed mounting concern about the threat that predatory journals pose to doctoral students, with at least one institution tightening up its quality criteria for PhDs by publication.

Western Sydney University is congratulated for this move to safeguard the integrity of its PhD by publication. All universities should have policies, arrangements and guidance material that recognise that there are people who intentionally publish with questionable publishers to game their institution’s systems.  We have linked to 9 related items.

As a “core consideration” of its doctorate policy, Western Sydney University (WSU) has narrowed the range of journals it accepts for published articles that form part of PhD theses. Its School of Nursing and Midwifery has gone a step further and insisted that papers must appear in outlets in the top 75 per cent of the SCImago Journal Rank.

The rule change came after an external examiner complained that papers submitted as a PhD thesis had been published in predatory journals. A review found that the journals did not meet WSU’s definition of predatory – publications that lacked peer review, transparency or reasonable editorial standards and solicited contributions deceptively.

Predatory journals undermining PhD by publication route
Australian university limits journals accepted for doctorates amid mounting concern among academics

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Related Reading

(Pakistan) The rising menace of scholarly black-market Challenges and solutions for improving research in low-and middle-income countries – JPMA Editorial (Aamir Raoof Memon, Farooq Azam Rathore | June 2021

Without stronger ethical standards, predatory publishing will continue to be a permanent feature of scholarly communication – London School of Economics Impact Blog (Panagiotis Tsigaris and Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva | March 2021)

(South Africa) Publish, profit, predate, perish and peer review – University World News (Patrick Fish | October 2020)

Questionable publishing practice? Are you harmed?

(Australia) Thousands of researchers in Australia appear on editorial boards of ‘predatory’ journals – Nature Index (Dalmeet Singh Chawla | April 2020)

When CVs Are Too Good to Be True – Inside Higher Ed (Colleen Flaherty | October 2019)

Mentors help authors say “no” to predatory journals – Elsevier Connect (Marilynn Larkin | November 2018)

Are we missing the true picture? Stop calling a moneybox, a fishing hook

NIH to researchers: Don’t publish in bad journals, please – Retraction Watch (Alison McCook | December 2017)

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