Aldo-Pier Solari wrote: > For over a year ago, there was a debate in FISH-ECOLOGY about > timely publications. I understand, from a few editors, this > issue is getting worse as time passes and the conventional > publishing system seems to be useless: > > - Editors cannot get referees to review papers; > - Referees return, after several months, papers without having > reviewd the material ('sorry, didn't have time'); > - Budget cuts shrink time & will of referees (generally senior > scientists); > - Senior scientists cannot afford working for free; > - Senior scientists _will not_ work for free; > (my snip) > I would suggest to editors to _correct_ this issue and implement > unconventional ways to solve this groove problem: Junior > scientists (even graduated students!) could review the majority > of _descriptive_ papers. Why dont you recruit graduated students > and new phd's ?. Or do editors _believe_ that all responsibility > of science may be thrown onto the shoulders of senior scientists?
I can only speak for myself and I few other junior colleagues (post-docs and recent faculty hires), but we have been reviewing papers for fairly prominent journals (Mar. Biol., MEPS, JEMBE, ICES J. Mar Sci., and several others) since we were second or third-year Ph.D. students. It seems that once you have published 2-3 papers on a specific subject in reputable journals, you get solicited to review papers on that or similar subjects. Of course, this solicitation of reviews from junior scientists may be a recent development - I haven't been around long enough to know. From my own experience, however, I can say that the first manuscripts sent to me were generally the work of other junior scientists. As I did more reviews for various journals, they began to send me papers by more senior and well-known scientists.
What I am trying to get at here is that many editors already do send papers to junior researchers and even graduate students. With the amount of new graduates and post-docs submitting papers at an ever-increasing rate, I cannot imagine how journals would review all the papers submitted if they relied solely on senior scientists.
Cheers,
Mark Tupper Research Assistant Professor, School of Marine Science, University of Maine 5741 Libby Hall, Orono, ME 04469-5741, USA tel. (207) 581-2733; FAX (207) 581-4388
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