Collaborating With Early Career Researchers to Enhance the Future of Scholarly Publication: A Guide for Publishers

Kohrs, Friederike;Kazezian, Vartan;Bagley, Robin;Boisgontier, Matthieu;Haase, Stefanie;et.al.
(2025) Learned Publishing — Vol. 39, n° 1 (2025)

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Authors
  • Kohrs, Friederikeorcid-logoQUEST Center for Responsible Research, Berlin Institute of Health at Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany
    Author
  • Kazezian, Vartanorcid-logoQUEST Center for Responsible Research, Berlin Institute of Health at Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin Berlin Germany
    Author
  • Bagley, Robinorcid-logoDepartment of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology The Ohio State University at Lima Lima Ohio USA
    Author
  • Boisgontier, Matthieuorcid-logoSchool of Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences University of Ottawa Ottawa Canada
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  • Author
  • Haase, Stefanieorcid-logoThünen Institute of Baltic Sea Fisheries Rostock Germany
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  • et. al.
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Abstract
<jats:title>ABSTRACT</jats:title> <jats:p>The scholarly publishing system is adapting to many changes, including open access and open data mandates, artificial intelligence, and other new technologies. Members of the research and publishing communities are working to establish a more equitable, fair, and rigorous system that serves researchers' evolving needs. Early career researchers (ECRs) are drivers of change, and publishers may wonder why and how they should involve ECRs in shaping the future of scholarly publishing. We held a virtual unconference to explore this issue with publishers and ECRs who were working to improve publishing. Some participants sought to improve peer reviewer or editor performance, whereas others sought to improve the publishing system itself through iterative or transformative change. Strategies for collaborating with ECRs to shape the future of scholarly publishing included peer review programmes, editorial programmes, ECR‐led journals, ECR boards and committee representatives, and other ECR‐initiated activities. ECRs particularly wanted to see three things improved: (1) Sharing research outputs other than publications, (2) addressing technological limitations to create systems that meet the research community's needs and facilitate knowledge advancement, and (3) fostering diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility. We offer tips for publishers on how to collaborate with ECRs to enhance scholarly publishing, appeal to and learn from younger researchers, and better meet researchers' needs.</jats:p>
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Citations

Kohrs, F., Kazezian, V., Bagley, R., Boisgontier, M., Brod, S., Carneiro, C., Casas, M., Chakrabarti, D., Colbran, R., Debat, H., Delshad, V., Drude, N., Edmunds, S., Fischer, F., Franzen, D., Gatto, L., Gazda, M., Gjoneska, B., Glatz, T., et al. (2025). Collaborating With Early Career Researchers to Enhance the Future of Scholarly Publication: A Guide for Publishers. Learned Publishing, 39(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/leap.2028 (Original work published 2025)