Predatory Journals in Journalism and Mass Communication A Case Study of Deceptions


Freedman E. Kurambayev B.
April 2022University of Toronto Press

Journal of Scholarly Publishing
2022#53Issue 3136 - 154 pp.

Predatory publishing is an increasingly difficult challenge to ignore because it threatens the integrity of research literature and scholarship. Still, this scholarly area is largely overlooked in journalism and media communications (J&MC) literature. This case study examines two J&MC journals from companies listed as possibly predatory by analyzing the experiences of scholars purportedly affiliated with them. Using a survey and interviews, the analysis suggests that these journals used deceptive and unethical tactics to recruit scholars as ostensible editorial board members and reviewers. Some scholars were listed without their consent or knowledge, and others asked unsuccessfully to be removed from the journals’ posted list of editorial board members and/or reviewers. However, some say they find their affiliation rewarding intellectually, for their careers, and for the discipline. The findings have practical implications for J&MC scholarship, especially for developing country academics with insufficient English-language proficiency and who face publish-or-perish pressures from their universities and government higher education ministries.

academic integrity , Beall’s List , open access , peer review , predatory journals , predatory publishing , publish or perish

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Department of Journalism, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States
Department of Media and Communications, KIMEP University, Almaty, Kazakhstan

Department of Journalism
Department of Media and Communications

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