Dear all,

   I apologize for the cross listing. We are trying to cover as broad a canvas 
as possible:

In the past years, journals have increased the responsibilities of 
editors-in-chief to the point that they have become gatekeepers of their 
publications. The bottom line is that papers get sent out to peer reviewers 
only when editors say so, if they deem the article to be "of broad enough 
interest" to their readers.


Clearly, there is a spectacular number of problems with this (though we do not 
seem to talk about them). For one, systematic bias can be introduced in a 
multitude of ways: what terrestrial researchers consider "hot topics" of 
"general interest" may not be the same as what freshwater or marine ones do. I 
keep glancing at the plant-herbivore interactions literature seeing how marine 
papers often cites terrestrial works, but not the other way around.


After talking to several colleagues, it seems that the trend is "I (insert 
editors name)  don't think this is of general interest but it is really good, 
so I recommend you submit your manuscript to this journal of also general 
interest (open access journal from our publisher that costs you thousands of 
dollars to publish in)." This, frankly, seems like a dishonest practice; if it 
is good enough for one general ecology journal it should be for another. Have 
we exchanged fashion for quality? We want to know your opinion.


We would like to compile data on the frequency of such cases. Our hypothesis is 
that the definition of "general interest" or "worthy of peer review" in ecology 
is completely arbitrary and we will be designing an experiment to test this, 
but we would like to establish a baseline by asking for cases in which authors 
have felt their papers have been rejected out of bias rather than merit. In 
order to narrow the field, it will be important to have articles that were 
published in journals after "broader" journals rejected them without peer 
review.


Your responses will be kept confidential,


Edwin

=================
Dr. Edwin Cruz-Rivera
Associate Professor
Department of Biological Sciences
University of the Virgin Islands
#2 John Brewers Bay
St. Thomas 00802
USVI
Tel: 1-340-693-1235
Fax: 1-340-693-1385

"It is not the same to hear the devil as to see him coming your way"
(Puerto Rican proverb)





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