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Critics argue that The Lancet failed to disclose potential conflict of interest when dismissing the leak theory
Trailblazing initiative to transform hiring, promotion and performance review has been praised by open science advocates
With history books increasingly including first-person, ‘confessional’ elements, authors explain why they take this approach, while other historians reflect on the dangers
Podcast denying systemic racist attitudes in medicine seen as emblematic of leadership at top periodical
Wide support for cOAlition S’ rights retention strategy would allow negotiators to take a harder line with publishers, says Alice Gibson
LSE’s iconic Economists’ Bookshop is latest casualty but scholars and booksellers insist the university bookstore still matters
Allowing faulty papers to go unchallenged damages integrity and threatens dangerous real-world consequences, says Peter Bowbrick
Historic learned society sets 75 per cent threshold for ‘flipping’ major titles
Analysis argues that science has a ‘critical problem’ because its self-correction process is slow and ineffective
Future citations of a journal paper drop by more than a third after being included in a review
David A. Sanders enjoys a vivid account of the many crafty ways academics steal the words of others
Be careful about what you give away in your excitement about signing a contract for a book, says Lennard Davis
The pandemic has curtailed urgent discussion of open access’ impact on scholarly societies, says Frank James
Initial data suggest a drop in published proceedings amid shift to virtual events
German study finds academics favouring Springer Nature and Wiley, with authors warning smaller publishers could be squeezed out
Covid-19 has prompted an explosion in preprints but has curtailed networking and underlined the extra pressures on women and junior academics. Simon Baker asks whether the pandemic era is a dark blip or a bright new dawn
Research is for public benefit. The UK’s next deal with Elsevier must accelerate the abolition of journal paywalls, says Paul Boyle
Four-year study into publisher responses uncovers delays of almost three years to investigations and ‘huge variance’ in action taken
The pandemic has exposed the limits that commercial models impose on libraries’ ability to facilitate access, says Gauthier Van Malderen
University system will keep paying publisher about $13 million (£9.4 million) a year
Academics’ desire to help the planet being ‘lost amid the realities of being a researcher’, survey concludes
Many university-owned periodicals are considering changing their business model, but report authors call for new funding strategy
Historic in-house press at Massachusetts Institute of Technology asking libraries for participant fee to enable titles to become publicly available
Data from study pinpoints first years after childbirth as biggest hit to women’s research productivity
Knock-backs are frequent and unavoidable. But treating referees’ comments with a hard-headed pragmatism lessens the sting, says Adrian Furnham
Controversial journal paper stirs debate on Asian wartime slavery
This isn’t the 18th century. Email and phones exist. So why is so much academic discussion still left to journals, asks Julian Baggini
Study says academics should highlight unreviewed papers’ uncertainty
Major scholarly publishers warn that some titles will become unviable unless open access scheme changes tack on compliance
Shocking lapses in scientific standards show why renewed scrutiny of existing literature and new anti-fraud measures are needed, says David A. Sanders
Percentage of papers with female authors rose markedly in latter part of 2020
National University of Singapore Press criticised over decision to scrap publication of title critical of country’s rulers
Strategy for institutional financing of open science follows California and UK models
Announcement of hefty article processing charges by prestige titles challenges goals of open access mandate
Thousands of PhD dissertations by Durham University available on Kindle services following mass scraping of online repository
Manuscripts by female authors enjoy more favourable treatment in many disciplines, according to analysis of 350,000 journal submissions
US-based academic publisher eager for digital expertise of London counterpart, but outsiders express concern about growing commercial control of scholarly communication
Ministry warns researchers against ‘degrading’ nation in pursuit of international journal publication
Authors express ‘deep regret’ after independent review finds conclusions of research are not supported
Academics will have to pay up to £7,800 for free-to-read option
While eLife is planning to publish only preprints, even it concedes that journal brand still counts for a lot, notes Michael Marinetto
Proposal is first of its kind in the Asia-Pacific region for the world’s largest academic publisher
Academics remain wedded to prestige indicators, but peer reviewers may conclude that the journal is profiteering, says Dorothy Bishop
Prestigious journal group seeks to spread cost of publishing across a greater number of authors than those accepted for publication
Academics justifiably express disbelief and outrage when librarians inform them that they can’t afford a particular title, says Caroline Ball
For a successful transition to open access, we must respect the needs and requirements for different types of output and disciplines, says Rhodri Jackson
As the pandemic reshapes both conferencing and publishing, melding talks and papers makes a lot of sense, says Richard Oliver
Covid is no reason to ease off on demands for open knowledge, Australian forum hears
Publishers warn that the pirate repository carries security risks, but critics say the threat is over-hyped to justify greater surveillance of researchers
The holy grail of a business model for open access monographs that works at scale for publishers, libraries and scholars is close, says Martin Paul Eve
Multi-source analysis of global open-access practices throws up surprises, with Europe and the US lagging behind
Supporting pure open access publishers can save money and help cement the transition to full open access, says Helen Dobson
Gambling studies expert puts extraordinary output down to collaboration and hard work
Report from Web of Science owners says that universities may need to do more to monitor research integrity
Deal with Max Planck institutes puts cost of publishing article in prestigious journal at £8,600
Pushed by Covid, academic authors see rare need to offer political voice
Forensic analysis of citations within leading scientific periodicals reveals alarming lack of rigour in academic referencing
Three-year deal will allow researchers to publish papers without paying additional article-processing charges
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the biggest private US funder of biomedical research, seeks to push adoption of European-led standard
Editing is often assigned to doctoral students from very different fields – but substandard manuscripts may be accepted anyway, says Brian Bloch