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What's in a Name? How False Author Affiliations Are Damaging Academic Research

What's in a Name? How False Author Affiliations Are Damaging Academic Research

When reading a research paper, can you be certain that the institution the author claims to be affiliated with is actually the institution that was responsible for supporting the research?

If World Leaders Choose to Fail Us, My Generation Will Never Forgive Them | Greta Thunberg

If World Leaders Choose to Fail Us, My Generation Will Never Forgive Them | Greta Thunberg

We are in the middle of a climate breakdown, and all they can talk about is money and fairytales of eternal economic growth, says climate activist Greta Thunberg.

Can We Assess the Wider Effects of Public Engagement?

Can We Assess the Wider Effects of Public Engagement?

The extent to which researchers can assess the impact of their public engagement is often under-analysed and limited to success stories. Drawing on the example of development aid, it is argued that we need to widen the parameters for assessing public engagement.

Quality in Peer Review: An Interview with Tracey Brown, Sense About Science

Quality in Peer Review: An Interview with Tracey Brown, Sense About Science

Continuing our celebration of Peer Review Week 2019, today Alice Meadows interviews Tracey Brown, OBE, Director of Sense about Science, which has been involved in Peer Review Week from the start.

Seven Steps to Make Travel to Scientific Conferences More Sustainable

Seven Steps to Make Travel to Scientific Conferences More Sustainable

Researchers should learn to travel better to mitigate their climate impacts. Institutions can help by facilitating and rewarding sustainable travel behaviour, rather than fuelling the pressure to attend conferences, say Olivier Hamant, Timothy Saunders and Virgile Viasnoff.

Quality is Multi-Dimensional: How Many Ways Can You Define Quality in Peer Review?

Quality is Multi-Dimensional: How Many Ways Can You Define Quality in Peer Review?

Alice Meadows and Karin Wulf kick off the fifth annual Peer Review Week with their thoughts on defining quality in peer review principles and practices.

Scientists Must Act on Our Own Warnings to Humanity

Scientists Must Act on Our Own Warnings to Humanity

We face interconnected planetary emergencies threatening our climate and ecosystems. Scientists should join civil disobedience movements to fight these unprecedented crises.

The Future of European Research Must Be Inclusive

The Future of European Research Must Be Inclusive

With Europe facing significant challenges over the next decade, it is vital that the EU's research activities are designed not just by bureaucrats but by a wide range of voices to ensure that they're fit for purpose, according to Jean-Eric Paquet, the European Commission's Director General for Research and Innovation.

Too Much Emphasis on Implicit Bias Impedes Gender Equality Efforts in Academia

Too Much Emphasis on Implicit Bias Impedes Gender Equality Efforts in Academia

Implicit bias - the presence of prejudices and stereotypes in the workplace - has been a topic of discussion both within and outside academia. Does this lead to a focus on the individual that masks embedded structures inhibiting gender equality?

Memo to Italy's President: Your Researchers Need You

Memo to Italy's President: Your Researchers Need You

The collapse of Italy's coalition government has left researchers vulnerable. The president should use his moral authority with party leaders to make sure that promises of increased funding are kept.

Open and Replicable Science Cannot Save Us from Academia

Open and Replicable Science Cannot Save Us from Academia

Researchers have tried for at least 200 years to change academia and they have all failed, claims opinion piece.

https://nplusonemag.com/issue-34/essays/sexism-in-the-academy/

https://nplusonemag.com/issue-34/essays/sexism-in-the-academy/

While there were significant gains during much of the 20th century, feminist progress in the academy has slowed and may have already come to a halt. Overarching essay provides many references.

AmeliCA Before Plan S

AmeliCA Before Plan S

Open access is often discussed as a process of flipping the existing closed subscription based model of scholarly communication to an open one. However, in Latin America an open access ecosystem for scholarly publishing has been in place for over a decade.