探花视频

Outdated advice

Published on
June 13, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

It is no secret that many business schools, including my own, use the Association of Business Schools鈥 Academic Journal Quality Guide to determine scholarly performance. Indeed, the publication states that it is 鈥渄esigned primarily to serve the needs of the UK business and management research community鈥 by providing 鈥渁n indication of where best to publish鈥 to secure tenure, promotion and other rewards. Yet the most recent edition, Academic Journal Quality Guide: Version 4, was unveiled in 2010 and no update has been published since.

The ABS stated that a new version would be released in 2012, but this has now been delayed until 2014. Quite why publication has been pushed back until after the research excellence framework one can only guess. Are we to believe that there have been no changes to the journal rankings since 2010? Rumours are rife that some have been promoted and others relegated.

As an early career researcher, the Guide is supposed to help me 鈥渢o decide what to read and where to publish鈥 to advance my career. In fact, the first function it sets for itself is to help 鈥渆arly career researchers or鈥esearchers transferring between disciplines/sub-fields or embarking on cross- or interdisciplinary research鈥 to identify the top-quality journals in their fields. But how can such an outdated list meet these aims?

I am as critical of ranking lists as the next researcher, but I am also keen to have a career. The outdated Guide means that there may well be researchers who currently feel secure with their output, perhaps having been awarded tenure, promotion or other rewards, who find that it is quickly downgraded when the new list is published. Equally, early career researchers like me do not know if the top-ranked journals we are submitting to or reading really are top any more.

I now find myself trendspotting rather than relying on such antiquated advice.

Robert Cluley
Lecturer in marketing
Nottingham University Business School

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