Episódios
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I talk with Sam about juggling two very large impactful journals, dealing with academic geopolitics, speed and the need for "leading" journals to be more proactive
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On the day of Moldova's vote to enter EU negotiations, an interview with two of the three editors of the Journal of Common Market Studies.
I talk to Roberta Guerrina and Gabriel Siles-Brügge about transdisciplinary research, how to edit it, the benefits of slow science, policy makers as authors and reviewers, and diving....
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Gary and I talk about non renewable resources, the tendency of journals to undergo mission creep, why so called elite journals often persist in reinventing the wheels other journals discovered long sense, and the joys of photographing dragonflies!
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Pierre and I talk about the human touch in forecasting, what finance can perhaps learn from other disciplines in relation to same, slow science and how it may have become a wicked problem, and the nature of elite journals
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I talk with John on publishing a large journal, the potential for journal irrelevance, social aspects of publishing and his past lives .....
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We talk about the evolving role of the library, how it can and should in the digital age be the repository of much more than is commonly expected, how librarians view metrics, and the role of slow and open science. And badminton.
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We talk about Graham's Law and Goodheart's law, reductionism and certification in journals, and the need for a new paradigm in how we conceptualize impact in journal outputs.
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I talk with Roger, from International Business Review. We discuss academic silo's, the creep of less than informative metrics into academic career planning and what if any can be done, and we talk hillwalking....
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I talk to Tom about whether Long Range Planning is a economics, strategy or IB journal, what that means in real terms as disciplinary splits, the nature of strategy as an overarching lens, and what its like to teach in a top tier US Business School.
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I talk to Aoife about the intertwined nature of scholarly overpublishing, and why good science is good science. location preferences, PhD student formation, academic administrators and their....skill sets..., and about how when you are lost any plan is a good plan. We also discuss the interdisciplinarity of RSER and why that matters in this day and age.
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Welcome to Series 2 ! In this series I branch out a little from pure finance journals, talking to colleagues involved in other, adjacent areas, to editors and bibliometricians, to librarians and others.
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This is the last in Series 1. I talk to Rose Liao, from Rutgers, Editor in Chief of Emerging Markets Review. We talk about the need to talk, take risks, the role of business schools/education/journals, and the crucial need for the system to become more representative and responsive.
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I talk to Mike Pagano, Villanova Univeristy, and co-editor in Chief (shared with Tina Zhang, who was not able to join us) of the Financial Review. We talk about Basilisk, Rokos vs Pagano's, the role of generative AI, how desk rejection can be a tool, and some cool innovations in FR in the area of video abstracts.
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Darragh is the Managing Editor of Economic and Social Review. ESR is an Irish-based journal, on the go since 1969. We talk about the challenges of managing a journal which is OA, society-owned and required to adhere to the international best practice frontier in terms of research quality while also keeping to its policy and domestic audience focus. And we talk about hurling (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aTcqB73fRdw) and sports biography books.
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Dayong is based at the Southwest University of Finance and Economics in Chengdy, Sichuan. We talk about journal rankings, the challenges in a "startup" journal situation, and why speed matters.
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I talk to Larisa, about her experiences as a section editor in Finance for a large OA journal, Heliyon. We touch on desk rejection approaches, how to improve processes, and the need for a work-life balance.
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I talk to Bart, Editor in Chief of the Journal. We have a wide-ranging discussion about challenges in managing extreme heterogeneity in submission areas and methods, about the culture of the publication ecosystem and why PR is a GOOD thing (or can be)
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I talk to Professor Richard Tol, Editor in Chief of Energy Economics, published by Elsevier. We talk about monopoly and monopoly power in publishing, the pros and cons of older v younger EiC's, and concerns around generative AI in publishing maybe being misplaced.
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An introduction to the podcast, what it aims to achieve, what it will and will not cover and why you might be interested
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