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Investigating academic library responses to predatory publishing in the United States, Canada and Spanish-speaking Latin America

机译:调查学术图书馆对美国,加拿大和西班牙语拉丁美洲掠夺性出版的回应

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Purpose This is a comparative investigation of how university libraries in the United States, Canada and Spanish-speaking Latin America are responding to predatory publishing. Design/methodology/approach The Times Higher Education World University Rankings was used to identify the top ten universities from each of the US and Canada, as well as the top 20 Spanish-language universities in Latin America. Each university library's website was scrutinized to discover whether the libraries employed scholarly communication librarians, whether they offered scholarly communication workshops, or whether they shared information about scholarly communication on their websites. This information was further examined to determine if it discussed predatory publishing specifically. Findings Most libraries in the US/Canada sample employ scholarly communication librarians and nearly half offer workshops on predatory publishing. No library in the Latin America sample employed a scholarly communication specialist and just one offered a workshop addressing predatory publishing. The websites of the libraries in the US and Canada addressed predatory publishing both indirectly and directly, with US libraries favoring the former approach and Canadian libraries tending towards the latter. Predatory publishing was rarely addressed directly by the libraries in the Latin America sample; however, all discussed self-archiving and/or Open Access. Research limitations/implications Brazilian universities were excluded owing to the researchers' language limitations. Data were collected between September 15 and 30, 2019, so it represents a snapshot of information available at that time. The study was limited to an analysis of library websites using a fixed set of keywords, and it did not investigate whether other campus units were involved or whether other methods of informing researchers about predatory publishing were being used. Originality/value The study reveals some best practices leading to recommendations to help academic libraries combat predatory publishing and improve scholarly publishing literacy among researchers.
机译:目的这是对美国,加拿大和西班牙语拉丁美洲的大学图书馆如何应对掠夺性出版的比较调查。设计/方法/方法时代高等教育世界大学排名用于识别来自美国和加拿大各自的十大大学,以及拉丁美洲的前20名西班牙语大学。每个大学图书馆的网站被审查,发现图书馆是否雇用了学术通信图书馆员,无论他们是否提供学术沟通研讨会,或者他们是否共享有关他们网站上学术沟通的信息。进一步研究了该信息以确定是否具体讨论了掠夺性出版。调查大多数图书馆在美国/加拿大示例中使用学术通信图书馆员以及近一半的追踪讲习班。在拉丁美洲的没有图书馆使用学术沟通专家,只有一个提供讲习班掠夺性出版的研讨会。美国和加拿大图书馆的网站和加拿大的掠夺性出版,直接和美国图书馆有利于前一种方法和加拿大图书馆倾向于后者。拉丁美洲样本中的图书馆很少直接解决掠夺性出版物;但是,所有都讨论了自我归档和/或开放访问。由于研究人员的语言限制,巴西大学被排除了研究限制/影响巴西大学。数据在2019年9月15日至30日之间收集,因此它代表了当时可用信息的快照。该研究仅限于使用固定的关键字对图书馆网站的分析,并且没有调查其他校园单位是否参与或是否正在使用关于掠夺性出版的其他方法。原创性/价值研究揭示了一些最佳做法,以帮助学术图书馆作战掠夺性出版,提高研究人员中的学术出版素养。

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