University Policies and Arrangements to Support the Publication of Academic Journals in Chile, Colombia, and Venezuela
ISBN: 978-1-80043-477-6, eISBN: 978-1-80043-476-9
Publication date: 20 January 2021
Abstract
Peer-reviewed indexable journals have expanded in recent decades as a result, in part, of the value given to research productivity (measured through citations). Latin American journals have grown prompted by the open access (OA) movement, the emergence of regional repositories/indexes, and policies linking institutional rankings and faculty salaries/promotions to indexed publications. This study’s aim was to map the ways Chilean, Colombian, and Venezuelan universities support journal publication. This qualitative study uses Margison and Rhoades’ (2002) Glonacal Agency Heuristic to describe factors that shape higher education (i.e., global, national, and local dimensions), adding university as unit of analysis. Semi-structured in-depth interviews from a previous study, current institutional documents, and websites of 12 major universities from Chile, Venezuela, and Colombia conformed the data of the study. Besides the most prestigious global indexes (Web of Science and Scopus) three regional repositories/indexes, Latindex, SciELO, and RedALyC, have played an important role as countries link faculty salaries/promotions and university ranking systems to publications included in one or more of these services. Latindex collaborates with national science and technology agencies, SciELO has country chapters based at universities (Colombia and Venezuela), and RedALyC works with individual institutions and journals. At the national level, Chile has mechanisms to provide funding for the publication and/or upgrade of journals and incentives to institutions for publications in indexed journals. Colombia’s journal evaluation system Publindex links articles in indexed journals to salary increases in public universities, standard that is also used by private institutions to grant monetary incentives to faculty for publications. Venezuela used to have a funding and publication incentive system that was discontinued in the last decade. Latin American journals are mainly published by universities. Institutions in this study have implemented strategies to support journals such as institutional repositories, discontinuation of print journals, technology support for OA publication, and funding mechanisms.
Keywords
- Academic capitalism
- Academic journals
- Bibliographic analysis services
- Chile universities
- Colombia universities
- Competitiveness
- Electronic publication
- Faculty productivity
- Funding
- Glonacal Agency Heuristic
- Higher education systems
- Institutional arrangements
- Institutional policies
- Journal indexation
- Latin America
- National journal evaluation systems
- Open access
- Research policies
- Faculty promotion
- Faculty salaries
- Scholarly journals
- Science
- Technology
- And innovation systems
- University journals
- University research
- Venezuela universities
Citation
Delgado, J.E. (2021), "University Policies and Arrangements to Support the Publication of Academic Journals in Chile, Colombia, and Venezuela", Sengupta, E. and Blessinger, P. (Ed.) International Perspectives on Emerging Trends and Integrating Research-based Learning across the Curriculum (Innovations in Higher Education Teaching and Learning, Vol. 36), Emerald Publishing Limited, Bingley, pp. 69-84. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2055-364120210000036006
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2021 Emerald Publishing Limited