scholarly journals Update in the editorial policy of the Arquivos do Instituto Biológico: align with Open Science and Good Editorial Practices

2021 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simone Bacilieri ◽  
Silvia Galleti
Author(s):  
Emir Efendic ◽  
Llewellyn E. Van Zyl

Problematisation: In recent years, psychology has been going through a crisis of sorts. Research methods and practices have come under increased scrutiny, with many issues identified as negatively contributing to low replicability and reproducibility of psychological research.Implications: As a consequence, researchers are increasingly called upon to overhaul and improve their research process. Various stakeholders within the scientific community are arguing for more openness and rigor within industrial and organisational (I-O) psychological research. A lack of transparency and openness further fuels criticisms as to the credibility and trustworthiness of I-O psychology which negatively affects the evidence-based practices which it supports. Furthermore, traditional gate-keepers such as grant agencies, professional societies and journals, are adapting their policies, reflecting an effort to curtail these trends.Purpose: The purpose of this opinion paper is, therefore, to stimulate an open dialogue with the South African Journal of Industrial Psychology (SAJIP) contributing authors, its editorial board and readership about the challenges associated with the replication crisis in psychology. Furthermore, it attempts to discuss how the identified issues affect I-O psychology and how these could be managed through open science practices and other structural improvements within the SAJIP.Recommendations: We enumerate several easily implementable open science practices, methodological improvements and editorial policy enhancements to enhance credibility and transparency within the SAJIP. Relying on these, we recommend changes to the current practices that can be taken up by researchers and the SAJIP to improve reproducibility and replicability in I-O psychological science.


founded on total unquestioning obedience and love for the master qua master, and her nascent political awareness which takes the form of hatred for the Sultan as the embodiment of the patriarchy, and of a singular outburst of generalized hatred for men: “nothing left but the portal that the man might enjoy. The filthy, selfish beast, the animal” (Roquelaure, 1985:99)’ (Ziv: 70). The last quote by Roquelaure is from the Beauty trilogy itself, and Ziv does not make it clear whether all men are referred to as ‘animals’ here, or only the Sultan. My concern is that there is no mention of the racialized dimensions of this portion of the text. It is surely no coincidence that a non-Western ‘Arab’ society is taken by Beauty to exemplify the horrors of patriarchal power, drawing on a powerful discourse of sexual slavery which constructs the East as the exotic but uncivilized Other. If the reference to the ‘animal’ in the text does refer to the Sultan, then remaining silent about the racialized—and racist—connotations of this association is inexcusable. I am not writing to Amalia Ziv in the first instance, because my concern is over the editorial practices of FR. To operate an editorial procedure which allows authors to remain so totally silent over ‘race’ and racism when discussing SM (as both Ziv and Lewis do in this issue) sits very uneasily alongside recent FR issues on ‘Thinking through Ethnicities’ and ‘Nationalities and National Identities’. Understanding the operation of power relations around ‘race’, ethnicity, sexuality, gender, disability, class and age means that we must notice where and how those relations of domination and subordination occur. Remaining silent lets them past us to continue their work. Feminism is about breaking these many silences, turning a spotlight on to oppressive discourses, practices and ideologies. I would hope that FR can develop an editorial policy which aims not to tell contributors what to write, but to encourage them (us) to address such questions of power where they are relevant in all issues of the journal. Christine Griffin University of Birmingham

2005 ◽  
pp. 124-124

1993 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond D. Fowler
Keyword(s):  

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