Publish and still perish? Learning to make the ‘right’ publishing choices in the Ghanaian academy
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Higher Education Research & Development
Abstract
Publication in ‘reputable’, peer-reviewed and indexed journals has
become a key requirement for promotion and career
advancement in African universities. There is little research into
how bibliometric measures of journal reputation are shaping the
publishing strategies and practices of Africa-based researchers.
This study, drawing on 43 in-depth interviews, explored the
publishing choices, tactics and discourses of early-career
academics at two different public universities in Ghana. Most
participants felt under constant pressure to publish, and more
than half invoked the ‘publish or perish’ aphorism unprompted in
conversation. They were also very aware that one could ‘publish
and perish’ by choosing the ‘wrong’ journals, such as those not
on university-approved lists or in the main global citation
indexes. Some regretted the journal choices they had made at
the start of their careers, and had since learnt to make every
publication ‘count’. Many invoked a moral and spatial dichotomy
of low-quality ‘local’ journals versus reputable ‘international’
journals. Most participants felt that more training, supervision and
mentorship would help them make the ‘right’ publishing choices.
In a global research economy that sustains geographical
inequalities and reputational hierarchies, journals published from
Africa are increasingly viewed as the ‘wrong’ choice.
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Research Article