Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians

Email solicitations for manuscript submissions are a common tactic employed by predatory journals to attract potential victims. Both new and established researchers alike have fallen prey to this tactic, justifying the need for librarians to provide further education and support in this area. Thi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paije Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2023-03-01
Series:Journal of the Medical Library Association
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jmla.pitt.edu/ojs/jmla/article/view/1554
_version_ 1797860806115721216
author Paije Wilson
author_facet Paije Wilson
author_sort Paije Wilson
collection DOAJ
description Email solicitations for manuscript submissions are a common tactic employed by predatory journals to attract potential victims. Both new and established researchers alike have fallen prey to this tactic, justifying the need for librarians to provide further education and support in this area. This commentary provides a succinct overview of predatory journals; briefly describes the problem of predatory journal email solicitations; explains the role librarians can play in their identification; and lists some red flags and tactics librarians can tell researchers to look out for, as informed by the literature and the author's analysis of 60 unsolicited journal emails she received in her own institutional inbox.
first_indexed 2024-04-09T21:51:49Z
format Article
id doaj.art-3a123dc9d03747ada8efc84c2c207e17
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1536-5050
1558-9439
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-09T21:51:49Z
publishDate 2023-03-01
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
record_format Article
series Journal of the Medical Library Association
spelling doaj.art-3a123dc9d03747ada8efc84c2c207e172023-03-24T12:55:34ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghJournal of the Medical Library Association1536-50501558-94392023-03-01110410.5195/jmla.2022.1554Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librariansPaije Wilson Email solicitations for manuscript submissions are a common tactic employed by predatory journals to attract potential victims. Both new and established researchers alike have fallen prey to this tactic, justifying the need for librarians to provide further education and support in this area. This commentary provides a succinct overview of predatory journals; briefly describes the problem of predatory journal email solicitations; explains the role librarians can play in their identification; and lists some red flags and tactics librarians can tell researchers to look out for, as informed by the literature and the author's analysis of 60 unsolicited journal emails she received in her own institutional inbox. https://jmla.pitt.edu/ojs/jmla/article/view/1554CommentaryPublishingFraudPredatory journalsLibrariansScholarly communications
spellingShingle Paije Wilson
Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
Journal of the Medical Library Association
Commentary
Publishing
Fraud
Predatory journals
Librarians
Scholarly communications
title Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
title_full Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
title_fullStr Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
title_full_unstemmed Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
title_short Unsolicited solicitations: identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
title_sort unsolicited solicitations identifying characteristics of unsolicited emails from potentially predatory journals and the role of librarians
topic Commentary
Publishing
Fraud
Predatory journals
Librarians
Scholarly communications
url https://jmla.pitt.edu/ojs/jmla/article/view/1554
work_keys_str_mv AT paijewilson unsolicitedsolicitationsidentifyingcharacteristicsofunsolicitedemailsfrompotentiallypredatoryjournalsandtheroleoflibrarians