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Thoughts on Publishing 2009 PEN meeting, Bogor

Thoughts on Publishing 2009 PEN meeting, Bogor. Gerald Shively, Purdue University Editor-in-Chief, Agricultural Economics Associate Editor, Environment and Development Economics. Academic Journals. “Owned” by the academic community Either literally or figuratively

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Thoughts on Publishing 2009 PEN meeting, Bogor

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  1. Thoughts on Publishing2009 PEN meeting, Bogor Gerald Shively, Purdue University Editor-in-Chief, Agricultural Economics Associate Editor, Environment and Development Economics

  2. Academic Journals • “Owned” by the academic community • Either literally or figuratively • Governed by page “budgets” • An important and binding constraint • Typical acceptance rates 10-40%

  3. Structure of Journal Operations • Editors (very busy) • Editorial Assistants (not busy) • Associate Editors (think they are busy) • Reviewers (pretend they are busy) • Few incentives for reviewers or associate editors • Few options to “enforce” the reviewing contract

  4. Editors • Typically serve briefly (3-6 years) • Rarely have an “agenda” • Try to serve the community as well as possible • Publish the best possible papers, subject to time, page budget and other constraints • Editors are busy people • They usually have all the regular things to do (teach, conduct research, supervise students, administrate, write grant proposals, and publish their own papers) • Editing is typically an “extra” responsibility

  5. Editor’s Responsibility • Fill the journal with papers that will be widely read and highly cited • Accept papers with novel methods, interesting stories, and general appeal. • Serve as a “gate keeper” for the community by quickly rejecting “bad” papers without using up a lot of precious reviewer or associate editor goodwill • Avoid mistakes and “arbitrariness” • Better to reject a good paper than accept a bad paper • Trust the review process but avoid reviewer “meddling”

  6. Constraints • Running a journal is an exercise in constrained optimization • Understanding constraints is essential to understanding how to improve your chances of getting your papers reviewed and (ultimately) accepted. • Page budgets • Editor’s time and energy • Reviewer’s time and energy

  7. Desk Rejects • Many papers are “desk rejected” • Editor rejects paper without sending it for review • 0-40% of papers (or more), depending on journal • Actually can be helpful for authors in some cases • Which get desk rejects? • Those in obvious need of much work due to dull story, weak analysis or weak writing • Overly narrow subject without no generalizable findings or methods/approach • Papers that are hard to review • Why? Novelty vs. Obscurity

  8. Accepted for Review • Editor will… • Assign best “possible” associate editors and reviewers • Match subject matter and methods • Pick reviewers who know something about the topic and will deliver good reviews on time • Typically 2 reviewers • Editors “tend” not to override reviewers • Split decisions – how are they resolved? • Additional rounds • Editor or Associate Editor as tie-breaker

  9. Author Strategy: Part I • Avoid small and obvious mistakes • Read and obey guidelines for submission • Mistakes in writing are signals of mistakes in analysis • Get help with written English • Align subject matter with journal aims • Show that paper connects to a “conversation” taking place in the journal • Short and informative cover letter • The cover letter rarely influences the process • Suggest reviewers, but do so with caution • Point out connections to previous work in the journal

  10. Author Strategy: Part II • Win over the reviewers (Goal – get R&R) • Be provocative without provoking • Be clear about the research question • 50% of negative reviews focus on this! • Be clear about your methods • the other 50% focus on this!

  11. Author Strategy: Part III • Work on the STORY • Negative reviews rarely focus on conclusions • Get help with written English (co-authorship?) • Make sure your lit review is complete and current • the reviewer is likely to be familiar with the field • Short papers are more likely to succeed • Easier to read: they hold the reader’s attention • Easier to write: maintain continuity of argument

  12. Revise and Resubmit • No guarantee of acceptance • Up to 1/2 of R&Rs are eventually rejected • Why? Failure to satisfy reviewers • 10% of papers that reviewers “accept” the Editor nevertheless rejects. Why? • perception of weak/incomplete reviews • similar or better papers in the pipeline • space limitations and narrow appeal

  13. Rejection • It happens to us all • Move on; don’t take it personally • Challenging a decision rarely works • It may annoy the editor, to your future disadvantage • Take the comments SERIOUSLY and don’t immediately send a flawed paper back out without revising it. • If a reviewer doesn’t understand what you have done, 9 out of 10 times it is the author’s fault.

  14. Good Luck!

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