QLC member, Assistant Professor, Ms Jhilam Chattaraj recently attended the Taylor and Francis Journals Editorial Roundtable, 2016. In this post, she shares her experience.
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Journal titles kept for display |
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Just Getting Ready! |
Introduction
9 March 2016, was indeed an interesting
day for me. It was a journey that began in atmospheric darkness and ended in
intellectual illumination. I am talking about the early morning solar eclipse
and The Taylor and Francis Journals Editorial Roundtable, held at Taj Vivanta, Hyderabad. It was an unique academic exercise. The theme of the event was
Indian Authors in the Global Arena.
It began at 10.30 am with the Registration. The hall was filled with rich
aroma of coffee, sumptuous cookies and murmuring voices of participants
exchanging pleasantries and visiting cards. At the Registration desk, I met a
young lady beaming with confidence and warmth. After collecting my kit, I straight away headed to the
conference room and took my seat at a table in the third row. I always take the
third row. It has a beauty of its own. Neither am I too far from the podium nor
too close. I can participate as well as be a wallflower. And on a lighter note, I have noticed that
apart from the first and last rows,
photographers concentrate a lot on the third row :)
At 11.15 a.m, the programme began with a
Welcome Address by Ms Nitasha Devasar, Managing Director, T&F India. She greeted the participants and summarised
the purpose of the event and what the audience could take back. It was
followed by an enlightening talk by Dr. David Green, International Publishing
Director, Taylor and Francis. Through several graphs and pie charts, he elaborated the
different aspects of publishing in journals. He encouraged Indian writers to concentrate more on their visibility,
outreach, Impact and public engagement. He acknowledged the fact that academicians
around the globe are under tremendous pressure to publish. But as an Editor, he
assured that he would never compromise on the quality of writing.
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The gift hamper won by a lucky participant |
The next talk was delivered by Prof.
Ajaya K. Sahoo Faculty, University of Hyderabad and Editor of the journal, South Asia Diaspora. His brief
presentation was titled, “Indian Authors in the Global Arena”. He highlighted
the recent trends in submission of articles to journals by Indians and rest of
the world. He further indicated the possibilities of co-operation between Taylor and Francis
and Indian researchers to bring out journals on issues related to
Indian culture and traditions. Prof. Sahoo perceived the journals as a way of
archiving traditional knowledge systems of the nation; which is very important
in times when cultures have become representative of what Zigmut Bauman calls as “liquid modernity”.
To familiarise the audience with such novel
ways of thinking and writing, Mr Gerald Dorey, Associate Editorial Director,
South Asia presented a talk on “Digital Trends and Developments”. He explained
in detail the aspects of Open Access Journal and the different forms of access
to journals. His conclusions also pointed out that Indian research in
Social Sciences and Humanities was disappointingly low. This fact created quite
a stir. The panel members and the audience for some time
debated upon the reasons for such poor research production by Indian authors. Mr
Dorey suggested that Indian writers could either collaborate with authors from
first world countries or attend workshops that could guide them to publish in
major journals. This session was followed by many questions and it thus left no
time for the next presentation. We had to break for lunch.
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A poster highlighting the use of social media for promoting research |
The post lunch session began approximately
at about 2.15 p.m. Ms Anindita Pandey, the
Regional Publishing Manager, South Asia spoke on the “Impact and Engagement:
Authors, Articles, Social Media and Altmetrics”. She offered useful tips on how
authors could use Facebook and Twitter to promote their work. The next and the
last talk of the day was delivered by Mr Colin Bulpitt, Publisher , Physical Science
on “Peer Review and Publishing Ethics-Introduction and Context”.
In his engaging talk, he drew attention
to several peer-review policies, aspects of plagiarism and the intriguing nature
of self-plagiarism. He also put forth certain case studies on dispute regarding
authorship of articles before the audience asking them for their response. The Roundtable winded up at about
3.30 p.m.
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In Conversation: Ms Nitasha Devasar with a Participant |
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Colin Bulpitt and his presentation |
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Dr. Sarumathy and Dr. K. Papamma: Representatives from NIRD, Hyderabad |
Takeaways
It was a useful and fruitful day for me:
Thank You Taylor and Francis! I would like to list down a few points that have
caught my attention. I intend to discuss about these in detail with interested faculty members
and scholars. And They are:
1. Why
are Indian academicians writing and publishing less? Do we shy away from promoting and engaging
others with our work?
2. What
could be done ? Can we organise some workshops or seminars where young
researchers can be encouraged and initiated into the process of publication?
3. Publication
is not just about scholarly writing. It is about the visibility, discoverability
and impact of scholarship.
4. The
process of writing and access to exclusive pieces of information is going to
change. Digital culture has changed and will further complicate the way we
perceive and approach the publication process.
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Acads love to pose too! |
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Click, type, enter: Mr Robinson Raju, Publishing Editor, Journals |
In the context of contemporary “time-space
compression” as elucidated by David Harvey, I wonder how young academicians of the
nation who want everything to happen “right here and right now" will sustain the
culture of knowledge production and distribution. I have a feeling, that we the
young and restless have to learn the hard way. We must inculcate the ability to
work and rework our writings. If at all we wish to save our words for posterity
then we must produce the finest possible versions of our work no matter
how laborious and time-consuming the process may be. I once again recall the
words of Dr David Green, and say that Quality and only Quality can survive the storms of time, technology and cultural changes.
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