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Revues et éditeurs prédateurs×Modèles de publication en libre accès×
DomaineÉthique de la publicationÉthique de la publication
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20102002
Auteur d'origineJeffrey Beall (University of Colorado Denver); international research communityBudapest Open Access Initiative (2002); open science movement
TypeFrameworkStandard
Source fondatriceBeall, J. (2010). Predatory Open-Access Scholarly Publishers. The Charleston Advisor, 11(4), 10–17. link ↗Budapest Open Access Initiative (2002, revised 2012). Budapest Open Access Initiative. link ↗
AliasPredatory Publishing, Fake Journals, Pay-to-Publish SchemesOA Publishing, Gold Open Access, Green Open Access, Diamond OA
Apparentées44
RésuméPredatory journals are fake academic publishers that exploit the open-access model by charging authors publication fees without providing peer review, editorial oversight, or quality control. Coined by librarian Jeffrey Beall in 2010, the term describes publishers that prioritize profit over scientific integrity, accepting nearly all submissions (regardless of quality), using deceptive marketing (claiming high impact factors, faking indexing, using names similar to established journals), and often hosting work that would not survive peer review. Publishing in predatory journals damages an author's credibility and wastes research dissemination efforts.Open access (OA) publishing removes subscription paywalls, making research freely available to all readers online without subscription fees. The Budapest Open Access Initiative (2002) defined OA as the right to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, and link research freely. Multiple OA models exist: Gold OA (immediate free access, often author-funded via APCs), Green OA (free self-archiving in repositories), and Diamond OA (free to both authors and readers). OA expands research impact, enables global participation in science, and aligns with public funding mandates. However, OA models vary in sustainability and are sometimes exploited by predatory publishers.
ScholarGateJeu de données
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Predatory Journals and Publishers · Open Access Publishing Models. Consulté le 2026-06-18 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare