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Predatory Publishing: Predatory Check Criteria

Designed to be useful and relevant, this guide will provide you with tips on how to identify and avoid predatory publishers

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Red Flags

Flattering email to invite you to submit an article or serve on the editorial board of a "scholarly" journal

  • poor language with typos and awkward style 
  • vocabulary below industry standard
  • offer sounds too good to be true

Journal title 

  • sounds similar to a reputable publication (words are in different order or mixed from several other titles)
  • contains prestigious-sounding but potentially vague terms such as "advanced", "global","international", "universal", "world", "open",  (although these words are also used by reputable journals)
  • might be hijacked from a legitimate academic journal: a bogus website offers rapid publication for a fee 

Website with information on the journal, editorial board, and publisher

  • site looks amateurish and unprofessional (layout, typos, poor quality pictures, flashy ads, dead links, abundance of well known logos) 
  • multiple pages "under construction", including current and past issues, editorial board
  • missing, scarce, or contradictory information on "About Us" page (claiming a US/Europe address - check with Google Maps)
  • contact information is missing, incomplete, or leads to unavailable links
  • unclear or falsely claimed affiliation to scholarly associations or reputable organizations
  • same publisher publishes multiple journals with a very broad scope and from a multiplicity of disciplines
  • editors and editorial board members are from all over the world and have fake or no academic credentials (or are unaware that they are listed!)
  • homepage language targets authors
  • the contact email address is non-professional or non-journal related

Metrics and indexing

  • no ISSN, no DOI
  • invented or fake metrics (sounding similar to established metrics used by reputable journals)
  • Impact Factor can't be verified in Journal Citation Reports
  • falsely claimed to be indexed, e.g., in DOAJ
  • not listed in reputable sources such as Ulrich's Periodical Directory

Article processing and peer review

  • publication is guaranteed
  • lack of clear instructions to authors
  • lack of transparency or policies about fees related to publishing 
  • article processing fees are below that of reputable open access journals 
  • peer review process is not clearly explained
  • peer review seems to be extremely fast (i.e., days) -  may be non-existent
  • articles are to be submitted via email (some predatory publishers use legitimate editorial manager systems - it doesn't make them legitimate)
  • Information on whether and how journal content will be archived and preserved is absent

Negative reputation

  • journal and/or publisher is already listed on Beall's list of Predatory Journals
  • listed on Cabell's Blacklist