Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 264
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-0-7425-1434-8 • Hardback • November 2004 • $159.00 • (£123.00)
978-0-7425-1435-5 • Paperback • November 2004 • $60.00 • (£46.00)
David Shatz is professor of philosophy at Yeshiva University. He has published articles and reviews in the fields of epistemology, free will, philosophy of religion, medical ethics, medieval Jewish philosophy, and contemporary Jewish philosophy.
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 Peer Review and the Marketplace of Ideas
Chapter 4 Bias and Anonymity in the Peer Review Process
Chapter 5 Is Peer Review Inherently Conservative? Should It Be?
Chapter 6 Peerless Review: The Strange Case of Book Reviews
Chapter 7 What Should Count?
Chapter 8 Where Do We Go From Here? Peer Review in the Age of the Internet
Part 9 Supplementary Essays
Chapter 10 Ethics and Manuscript Reviewing
Chapter 11 Why Be My Colleague's Keeper? Moral Justifications for Peer Review
Chapter 12 Peer Review Practices of Psychological Journals: The Fate of Published Articles, Submitted Again
Chapter 15 No Bias, No Merit: The Case Against Blind Submission
Chapter 16 Fish on Blind Submission
Chapter 17 Reply to Skoblow
Chapter 18 Revelation: a Physicist Experiments with Cultural Studies
Chapter 23 The Invisible Hand of Peer Review
This is a useful study especially for those philosophically minded scholars who like to consider every angle of every possible contingency. Read it and rethink peer review!
— Robert Hauptman; Journal of Information Ethics