Journals need to provide better guidance for victims of plag

Journals need to provide better guidance for victims of plagiarism

Academics and researchers are ill prepared for what to do when they’re victims of publication misconduct, as Andrew Colman and colleagues found out when their article was plagiarised

Plagiarism in published research articles is a threat to the integrity of the scientific record, and it seems to be on the increase—boosted by the growing industry of predatory publishing.1 Open access journals of dubious quality exploit researchers by charging publication fees for rapid publication without rigorous scrutiny. Demand for easy and rapid publication of articles, in turn, arises from the increasingly competitive market in academic jobs and the demand this creates for researchers to publish journal articles. Plagiarism in predatory journals threatens to erode the integrity of higher degrees and CVs, and hence potentially the expertise of doctors, scientists, and other professionals, and of the academics who train them.23

We discovered in March 2022 that an article we’d published4 had been plagiarised in an obscure journal.5 We might never have known of the plagiarism had we not been alerted to it by a student who spotted the duplication. The plagiarising article was an almost word-for-word …

Related Keywords

Elaine Gurr , Tim Stokes , Carolyn Tarrant , Andrew Colman , Andrewm Colman , Committee On Publication Ethics , Society Publishers , Association Of Learned , Retraction Watch , Professional Society Publishers , Publication Ethics ,

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