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John Bhasker; Rajadurai Vijay Solomon – Research Evaluation, 2025
The prevalence of pseudo-publishing practices poses significant challenges to the integrity of academic research, particularly in India. Pseudo-journals are publications that fail to meet the standards of legitimate scholarly publishing, including predatory and hijacked journals. While widely recognized indicators and red flags for identifying…
Descriptors: Publishing Industry, Deception, Publications, Integrity
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William L. Gannon; John Barnes – Journal of Research Administration, 2025
Purposefully publishing a fraudulent scholarly paper is considered research misconduct and never tolerated in academia. True scholars work hard to create and publish work in legitimate ways. However, fraudulent publishers--companies that solicit and quickly publish research papers without review or quality assurances that evaluate, judge, and…
Descriptors: Research Administration, Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Scholarship
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Andrea A. Wirth – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2025
This paper describes results of a 2023 survey of authors who applied to University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) Open Article Fund, a fund that supports article processing charges (APCs). The survey sought feedback about the fund's impact, value, and award criteria as well as opinions on other open access topics. Results show that the fund has had a…
Descriptors: Universities, Access to Information, Authors, Attitudes
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Jeniece Tyria Lusk; Kara Jones; Alanna Ross; Veronique Lecat – New Review of Academic Librarianship, 2023
Open access (OA) publishing presents university librarians, administrators, and faculty researchers with a paradox of both opportunities and challenges. For faculty researchers in particular, the decision of whether to pursue OA publication of their scholarship is driven by their perceptions of the credibility and quality of OA publishing. While…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Access to Information, College Faculty, Teacher Researchers
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Muhammad Azam; Nargis Perveen – Research Evaluation, 2024
This study critically examined the increasing threat of predatory publications in academia, revealing how researchers at Pakistan's Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) take advantage of this trend for academic gains. We examined the widespread trend of predatory publishing for Pakistani public and private HEIs, explicitly focusing on Physical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physical Education, Higher Education, Faculty Publishing
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Berisha Qehaja, Albana – Journal on Efficiency and Responsibility in Education and Science, 2020
Academics and scholars need to publish their research results. In addition, they are required to publish scientific papers to prove their research commitment and to achieve certain academic titles in higher education institutions. Globally, there are many scientific journals of well-known publishing houses/universities, which offer opportunities…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Writing for Publication, Publishing Industry, Scientific Research
Daniel, John – Council for Higher Education Accreditation, 2016
Alarmed by the increasing frequency of press reports on corrupt practices in the higher education sector, the UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP) and the International Quality Group of the US Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA/CIQG) joined forces to convene an expert meeting in Washington, DC, on 30/31…
Descriptors: Integrity, Educational Quality, Higher Education, Quality Assurance
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McKenna, Brian – Policy Futures in Education, 2010
This article focuses on the author's applied anthropological work with the Ingham County Health Department between 1998 and 2001. Government administrators were reflexively aware that nobody had ever stepped back to assess the area's overall environmental health and rank the issues according to some criteria, such as by the "most urgent…
Descriptors: Counties, Local Government, Administrative Organization, Power Structure