Guardians of Science - Fairness and Reliability of Peer Review
ISBN: 9783527602209
Platform/Publisher: WOL / Wiley-VCH
Digital rights: Users: Unlimited; Printing: Unlimited; Download: Unlimited
Subjects: Chemistry; General & Introductory Chemistry;

Ever got a paper rejected?
And have you wondered whether the mysterious process behind the editor's decision was fair and reliable?
For many years, renowned scientific journals have resorted to peer review as the best available means of separating the wheat from the chaff in science publishing. But is peer review really fair, reliable and unbiased? And does it prevent fraud in science, or hinder innovative research?
In this book H.-D. Daniel presents a detailed investigation into the peer review system of Angewandte Chemie, one of the world's leading chemistry journals.
In particular, his analysis focuses on the
* content and level of agreement of referee reports
* fate and impact of papers rejected by Angewandte Chemie and published elsewhere
* level of bias involved in editorial and reviewers' decisions and based on incidental aspects, such as nationality, academic title and subject area of a paper's author(s).
Scientists - who must publish (or perish) -, editors and all non- specialists interested in the controversial issue of quality control in science will be fascinated by this case study.


Hans-Dieter Daniel holds a dual professorship at ETH Zurich and at the University of Zurich. Since 2002, he has been Professor for Social Psychology and Research on Higher Education at ETH Zurich.

hidden image for function call