4.2 Article

Fake Journals and the Fragility of Authenticity: Citation Indexes, Predatory Publishing, and the African Research Ecosystem

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFRICAN CULTURAL STUDIES
Volume 33, Issue 3, Pages 276-296

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13696815.2020.1864304

Keywords

Predatory publishing; authenticity; journal citation indexes; Nigeria; Beall's list

Funding

  1. Research England (GCRF-QR) [KCD000141]

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This article delves into the contentious issue of academic authenticity in the African research ecosystem, focusing on Nigeria. It highlights the fear of fake journals among African academics and how international journal citation indexes are used to assess the credibility of African journals and publishers. Through case studies of Nigerian commercial publishing houses, it demonstrates the challenges they face in getting their journals listed in reputable databases, raising questions about the credibility of these citation indexes in the context of African academia.
This article explores the contested politics of academic authenticity within the African research ecosystem, with particular reference to Nigeria. We show how a fear of fake journals is cultivated amongst African academics, with international journal citation indexes being used to adjudicate the credibility of African journals and publishers. The article juxtaposes an ethnographic vignette of a major publisher's training webinar with detailed case studies of two Nigerian commercial publishing houses. Established by entrepreneurial academics in response to limited local journal capacity and the exclusions enacted by Northern editorial gatekeeping, their journals have low article processing charges and, in some cases, minimal peer-review. One publisher was labelled as predatory in Beall's list, leading to its journals being removed from Scopus, the Elsevier-owned journal citation index. The other has struggled to get its journals listed in alternative journal databases, such as the Directory of Open Access Journals. The article explores how these citation indexes become contested markers of academic authenticity. We end by reflecting on the implications of this index-linked credibility for the future of African journals and the circulation of research knowledge across the continent.

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