New criteria for special issues

There has been a proliferation of special issues recently. DOAJ is responding to concerns from the community by adding new criteria to its Basic criteria. After today, all new applications submitted must comply with them.

We work hard to ensure we only include trustworthy journals in the directory. We have responded to concerns around the proliferation of special issues in scholarly publishing and added some additional criteria around the use of special issues, which we are now sharing with our community.

Special issues have been around for decades. Publication of article collections on a particular theme in a special issue can be a useful way of highlighting important or topical work or curating information in focused or niche research areas. Special issues are typically managed by guest editors, who propose or are invited to edit an issue in a topical subject area. These guest editors may invite or commission papers and oversee the entire peer review process.

However, in recent years, publishers have started to use special issues as a way of driving journal growth and revenues. In some journals, the number of articles published in special issues far exceeds the number of articles in regular issues. This has led to widespread concerns about the quality of content in these issues, the peer review processes undertaken, aggressive marketing to academics, and even the prospect of fraud. A recent discussion document from COPE proposes a number of best practices for guest-edited collections, including special issues. Following the publication of these guidelines and in consultation with other partners, we have added new criteria to our Guide to Applying that cover the publication of special issues and set standards for journals applying for inclusion in DOAJ. The new criteria are replicated here:

Special issues

Journals that publish special issues or other content curated by guest editors must adhere to these additional criteria:

DOAJ will not accept a journal if all content in the last year/volume is published as special issues.

All new applications to DOAJ must adhere to these criteria. Any journals previously accepted for inclusion in DOAJ will be removed if they are found to be publishing special issues that do not meet the criteria.