Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals

Introduction Predatory journals have been acknowledged as an increasing concern in the scholarly literature over the last decade, but research on the subject has been sparse.  Research that has focused on predatory journals in the Canadian context has been even rarer, and limited to work focused...

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Autor principal: Maureen Nicole Babb
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Publicado: University of Alberta 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:0567468c3def4a7daed05e8f4f4c79842021-12-05T13:55:44ZCanadian Academics’ use of predatory journals10.29173/jchla295791708-6892https://doaj.org/article/0567468c3def4a7daed05e8f4f4c79842021-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://journals.library.ualberta.ca/jchla/index.php/jchla/article/view/29579https://doaj.org/toc/1708-6892 Introduction Predatory journals have been acknowledged as an increasing concern in the scholarly literature over the last decade, but research on the subject has been sparse.  Research that has focused on predatory journals in the Canadian context has been even rarer, and limited to work focused on a single university.  This study explores publishing trends in predatory journals by authors affiliated with Canadian Universities. Methods Articles published by authors at 30 Canadian universities, including all universities in the U15, were pulled from select predatory journals.  Key data including author affiliation, article type, discipline, and grant information were extracted from the articles. Results All universities in the study were found to have publications in predatory journals.  The health sciences accounted for 72% of the publications, and the sciences for 20%.  Research articles accounted for 50% of the articles.  Opinion, editorial, or commentary pieces accounted for 24% and 19% were review articles.  Grant funding was indicated in 34% of the articles, with NSERC and CIHR being top funders.  The research-intensive U15 universities were found to publish more in predatory journals than their non-U15 compatriots, even when the universities were of similar size.  Discussion Canadian scholars were found to publish in predatory journals, particularly those scholars from the health sciences and research-intensive U15 universities.  Grant funding was common, and often came from high profile funders like NSERC and CIHR.   This exploratory suggests that policy and education initiatives may be warranted in Canadian contexts, especially in the health sciences and at research-intensive universities. Maureen Nicole BabbUniversity of AlbertaarticleBibliography. Library science. Information resourcesZENFRJournal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association, Vol 42, Iss 3 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
FR
topic Bibliography. Library science. Information resources
Z
spellingShingle Bibliography. Library science. Information resources
Z
Maureen Nicole Babb
Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals
description Introduction Predatory journals have been acknowledged as an increasing concern in the scholarly literature over the last decade, but research on the subject has been sparse.  Research that has focused on predatory journals in the Canadian context has been even rarer, and limited to work focused on a single university.  This study explores publishing trends in predatory journals by authors affiliated with Canadian Universities. Methods Articles published by authors at 30 Canadian universities, including all universities in the U15, were pulled from select predatory journals.  Key data including author affiliation, article type, discipline, and grant information were extracted from the articles. Results All universities in the study were found to have publications in predatory journals.  The health sciences accounted for 72% of the publications, and the sciences for 20%.  Research articles accounted for 50% of the articles.  Opinion, editorial, or commentary pieces accounted for 24% and 19% were review articles.  Grant funding was indicated in 34% of the articles, with NSERC and CIHR being top funders.  The research-intensive U15 universities were found to publish more in predatory journals than their non-U15 compatriots, even when the universities were of similar size.  Discussion Canadian scholars were found to publish in predatory journals, particularly those scholars from the health sciences and research-intensive U15 universities.  Grant funding was common, and often came from high profile funders like NSERC and CIHR.   This exploratory suggests that policy and education initiatives may be warranted in Canadian contexts, especially in the health sciences and at research-intensive universities.
format article
author Maureen Nicole Babb
author_facet Maureen Nicole Babb
author_sort Maureen Nicole Babb
title Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals
title_short Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals
title_full Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals
title_fullStr Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals
title_full_unstemmed Canadian Academics’ use of predatory journals
title_sort canadian academics’ use of predatory journals
publisher University of Alberta
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/0567468c3def4a7daed05e8f4f4c7984
work_keys_str_mv AT maureennicolebabb canadianacademicsuseofpredatoryjournals
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