How pre-publication journal peer review (re)produces ignorance at scientific and medical journals: a case study
| dc.contributor.author | Gaudet, Joanne J. | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2014-06-20T15:47:03Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2014-06-20T15:47:03Z | |
| dc.date.created | 2014 | |
| dc.date.issued | 2014-06-20 | |
| dc.description.abstract | The main goal of this paper is to explore how journal peer review produces and reproduces ignorance at scientific and medical journals. I focus on the case of pre- publication journal peer review (traditional peer review). Scientific ignorance is non- pejorative as the limits and borders of knowledge where new scientific ideas can contain new ignorance that pushes the boundaries of knowledge. Traditional peer review is an example of a ‘boundary judgement’ social form where content refers to decisions from the judgement of scientific written texts held to account to an overarching knowledge system – creating boundaries between what is and what is not considered science. Moreover, boundary judgement forms interact with the social form of scientific exchange where scientists communicate knowledge and ignorance. I investigate traditional peer review’s structural properties – elements that contribute to shaping relations in a form – to understand ignorance (re)production. Analysis of twenty-five cases with empirical and self- and third party accounts data, and data from eleven semi-structured interviews helps construct theoretical insights into how traditional peer review mostly contributes to ignorance reproduction. Reproduction owes to four structural properties: (1) contingency traditional peer review places on scientific exchange; (2) secrecy for original manuscripts and editorial judgements and decisions; (3) a relation of accountability to empiricism for editorial readers that helps construct a boundary for manuscripts, deemed as scientific or not; and (4) a relation of accountability to readers enhanced by a criterion of originality that appears to construct another boundary for manuscripts, deemed as newsworthy or not. I conclude with implications from this work set against Kuhn’s theory of paradigms. I also look to implications for authors, policymakers, editors, and journal publishers. | |
| dc.description.sponsorship | Research was supported in part by a Joseph-Armand Bombardier Canada Graduate Scholarship from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. | |
| dc.identifier.citation | Gaudet, J. 2014. How pre- publication journal peer review (re)produces ignorance at scientific and medical journals: a case study. uO Research. Pp. 1-67. | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10393/31198 | |
| dc.subject | Journal Peer Review | |
| dc.subject | Science Evaluation | |
| dc.subject | Resistance to new scientific ideas | |
| dc.subject | Sociology of Knowledge | |
| dc.subject | Scientific and medical journals | |
| dc.subject | Sociology of Ignorance | |
| dc.title | How pre-publication journal peer review (re)produces ignorance at scientific and medical journals: a case study | |
| dc.type | Working Paper |
