Journals
in sentence
118 examples of Journals in a sentence
Yet Brunner's paper was published in one of the world’s most prestigious
journals
to considerable publicity.
It is said that NBER working papers are even more prestigious than publication in refereed
journals.
Streets and squares, newspapers and literary
journals
became the ground for free public expression.
In 1955, Garfield created the Science Citation Index (SCI), a database containing all of the cited references across the most highly respected scientific journals, thereby capturing the sprawling web of connections among texts.
More appealing, however, was the possibility of tracking the scholarly influence of oneself and others over time and across fields, and identifying the most highly cited scientists, papers, journals, and institutions.
In the mid-1980’s, there were about 1,000 independent, uncensored
journals
in Poland.
Today, scientists are rewarded for how many papers they publish, and in which
journals.
He exulted that Leo’s “Catholic principles on the social question have…passed little by little into the patrimony of all human society…not only in non-Catholic books and journals, but also in legislative halls and courts of justice.”
As a result, undergraduate students struggle to understand even the abstracts of papers on the complex representations of microeconomic reality that fill research
journals.
But at least four reports in major medical
journals
(Ramstrom, 1998;Moskowitz, 1985;Chesher, 1995; and Ashton, 2001), show the contrary.
Despite fierce competition for academic tenure, for space in
journals
and in other media, and for advancement in general, people talk to each other as colleagues.
We rely on external referees for promoting basic scientists, who publish their work in national or international
journals.
For example, to ensure transparency, scientific
journals
require authors to declare conflicts of interest.
A couple of articles in one of my own books were deleted without an official explanation, and phrases, sentences, and even paragraphs have regularly been removed from my columns and commentaries in
journals
and newspapers.
Commentaries in leading newspapers and on-line
journals
demonstrated a diversity of opinion seldom seen in the country's state-controlled media, and precipitated wider discussion in people's living rooms.
They must publish their work in peer-reviewed
journals
increasingly often to climb the career ladder, protect their jobs, and secure funding for their institutions.
But what happens to scientists and other scholars, such as those in the Middle East, who have different research concerns from – and scant connections to – the professional
journals
that can make or break an academic/scientific career?
Scholars and institutions with high publishing rates in the established
journals
receive better productivity scores, which translate into bigger rewards, in terms of enhanced careers and greater research funding.
Academic
journals
determine the various disciplinary rankings that academic institutions are compelled to climb, which leads institutions to hire and retain only those scholars who can produce at high rates.
This has given rise to a deeper, twofold problem: academic
journals
have become disproportionately influential, and they have placed a premium on empirical research.
With respect to the first problem,
journals
are gradually replacing institutions as the arbiters of quality within academic communities.
Scholars in almost any discipline seeking jobs at “A-level” institutions must publish in a select few A-level
journals
that are seen as gateways.
These journals’ editorial boards increasingly privilege positivist theoretical work – meaning research that is based on empirical data analysis.
Qualitative research – such as ethnographies, participatory surveys, and case studies – is often designated as suitable only for B- and C-level
journals.
Thus, scientists working in developing countries face a dilemma: either work on rich-world problems for which there is abundant data, or risk career advancement by conducting qualitative work that will not make it into A-level
journals.
When he dug deeper into his own research, he found that 50% of what he had learned about African soil came from African researchers, who have not or could not publish their work in international academic
journals.
Countries where English is not the lingua franca are particularly disadvantaged in science, not because they lack academic excellence, but because English-language
journals
call the shots.
Non-English academic
journals
simply do not command the same attention in the science community.
As English-language empirical-research
journals
consolidate their hold on the channels that determine whether or not a scientist will have a successful career, developing countries will have to invest heavily in their own data infrastructure to place domestic researchers on a more competitive footing.
With (mostly) United States-based academic
journals
reigning over global science, no one has to move to become part of a new brain drain, whereby scientists’ research priorities, problems, and methods gravitate to the dominant positivist epistemology, at the expense of all alternatives.
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