This edited book focuses on the certifiers of scientific knowledge, bringing together experts in a variety of areas in Applied Linguistics to address the complex topic of editing and reviewing in writing for scholarly publication.
Pejman Habibie is an Assistant Professor of TESOL and Applied Linguistics at Western University, Canada. He is a founding co-editor of the Journal of English for Research Publication Purposes and a founding co-editor of book series Routledge Studies in English for Research Publication Purposes.
Anna Kristina Hultgren is Professor of Sociolinguistics and Applied Linguistics and UKRI Future Leaders Fellow at The Open University, UK. Her research focuses on the interconnectedness of language and ongoing societal, political and economic restructuring.
Sue Starfield, School of Education, UNSW Sydney. Australia
“This volume sheds a new light on gatekeeping practices in academic settings by looking at the endeavour from the inside, and recalling the personal histories, narratives and autoethnographic accounts of a number of experienced Applied Linguistics researchers around the world – once newcomers but today safegatekeepers after an endurance journey. It is also a reflective exercise on the asymmetries that set up additional hurdles to non-Anglophone gatekeepers in an Anglophone-centred academia, and how these can be successfully cleared and turned into windows of opportunity for career development. The book is innovative in that it extends its scope well beyond the traditional focus of the do’s and don’ts of research writing and peer review practices. The editors have delved into the different dimensions of scholarly publication by exquisitely weaving the personal gatekeeping trajectories of contributing authors as journal editors, book series editors, journal article reviewers, book reviewers, book proposal reviewers, mediators, custodians, referees, mentors, or research auditors. The result is this inspiring compilation that brings together all the individual threads of the research writing experience under the emic perspective. This is not merely a book about gatekeeping and gatekeepers inacademia; it is a book about negotiating discourse, mediating literacies, navigating authority, building up expertise, legitimasing participation, valuing research, and certifying scientific knowledge. Quite simply, it is a thought-provoking book about the game of scholarly publication and the success and failure of its players. With an entertaining prose and a personal focus, each and every chapter will certainly appeal to experienced researchers, who will enjoy and identify themselves with many of the snapshots, anecdotes and stories recounted herein, as well as to early-career researchers, who will be pleased to see that riding the waves of scientific publication is a complex but rewarding adventure”.
Ana Bocanegra-Valle, University of Cadiz, Spain