Reviewing articles as a way of professional evaluation of scientific texts: organizational and ethical aspects
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DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/kpm.04(1).2020.03
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Article InfoVolume 4 2020, Issue #1, pp. 26-36
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The purpose of the paper is to summarize the organizational and ethical aspects, problems and prospects of peer reviewing. To do this, from September 2019 to January 2020, a survey of Ukrainian scientists registered in Facebook groups “Ukrainian Scientific Journals”, “Ukrainian Scientists Worldwide”, “Pseudoscience News in Ukraine”, “Higher Education and Science of Ukraine: Decay or Blossom?” and others was conducted. In total, 390 researchers from different disciplines participated in the survey. The results of the survey are following: 8.7% of respondents prefer open peer review, 43.1% – single-blind, 37.7% – double blind, 9.2% – triple blind, 1.3% used to sign a review prepared by the author. 75.6% of respondents had conflicts of interest during peer reviewing. 8.2 % of reviewers never reject articles regardless of their quality. Because usually only editors and authors see reviews, it can lead to the following issues: reviewers can be rude or biased; authors may not adequately respond to grounded criticism; editors may disregard the position of the author or reviewer, and journals may charge for publishing articles without proper peer review.
- Keywords
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JEL Classification (Paper profile tab)Y50, I29, О34
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References62
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Tables0
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Figures6
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- Figure 1. Distribution of answers to the question “What model of review did you work on?”
- Figure 2. Distribution of answers to the question “What model of review do you prefer?”, %
- Figure 3. Distribution of answers to the question “What is your main motivation to be a reviewer?”
- Figure 4. Distribution of answers to the question “For what reasons do you reject articles?”
- Figure 5. Distribution of answers to the question “Do you check the facts in scientific articles?”
- Figure 6. Distribution of answers to the question “How impartial are your assessments?”
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