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Accountability in Research
Ethics, Integrity and Policy
Volume 17, 2010 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Quality and Peer Review of Research: An Adjudicating Role for Editors

Pages 130-145 | Published online: 11 May 2010
 

Abstract

Peer review gives research a stamp of approval, but the reviews themselves can be flawed. This is potentially serious for the writer, the journal, and journal user. This study describes shortcomings of the peer review process and condenses them into an explanatory framework involving situational, personal, social, and ethical factors. Some proposals to improve matters are impractical and may make them worse. Some data is offered which illustrates the problem and suggests a potential solution. Informed editors who avoid mechanical approaches engage cautiously and critically with reviews and guard against bias, even in themselves, could make a significant difference.

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