Could Distributed Peer Review Better Decide Grant Funding?
The landscape of academic grant funding is notoriously competitive and plagued by lengthy, bureaucratic processes, exacerbated by difficulties in finding willing reviewers. Distributed […]
You like the idea of “megajournals”–online-only, open access journals that cover many subjects and publish content based only on whether it is […]
A quick internet search of “smartphone etiquette in class” will give you a fairly straightforward answer: don’t use your phone. But what […]
Editors of the recently launched journal Research and Politics argue publishing in political science requires a reboot. Time lags in conventional publishing and the limited accessibility of articles can undermine researchers’ attempts to maximize the impact of their work.
[We’re pleased to reproduce Journal of Management Inquiry‘s “Out of Whack” by Charles M. Vance.] Read “Out of Whack” for free from […]
[Editor’s Note: We are pleased to reproduce Michael LaTour’s editorial from the most recent issue of Cornell Hospitality Quarterly.] More than ever […]
The line between studying online and studying on campus is increasingly blurry, argues tech thinker David Glance.
Might adding some working political scientists into legacy media outlets help curb the use of misleading headlines and made-up trend stories in scoop-hungry news coverage?
Becoming a member of an editorial board can be a paramount step in the life of an academic. Scholars are able to […]