Category Archives: Open peer review

Research quality: a technocratic issue or a philosophical question?

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Motorbyke

A minister of the French government summoned a few of the most eminent merchants and asked them for suggestions on how to stimulate trade-as if he would know how to choose the best of these. After one had suggested this and another that, an old merchant who had kept quiet so far said: “Build good roads, mint sound money, give us laws for exchanging money readily but as for the rest, leave us alone! [Lasst uns machen] ” If the government were to consult the Philosophy Faculty about what teachings to prescribe for scholars in general, it would get a similar reply: just don’t interfere with the progress of understanding and science. (I. Kant, The Conflict of the Faculties, AK VII, 19-20 n2)

When Francesca Di Donato wrote the article we are proposing for open peer review, the COARA principles and its internal governance could perhaps still be developed in a Kantian way. Now, however, with the benefit of hindsight, we are in a better position to see whether this alleged potential has been developed or not.

In the concluding remarks of her article, Francesca Di Donato argues, following Kant, that the evaluation of research belongs only to the scientific community: “philosophical activity is fundamental research, the exercise of a method which consists in subjecting any doctrine to criticism, and as such it is the fundamental precondition of all knowledge. It consists of free communities of peers who learn from their mistakes and constantly self-correct.” Therefore, she concludes, “changing the way we evaluate is not enough if we do not also discuss the evaluators themselves. The last point is at the core of a responsible research assessment reform. In fact, the ARRA requires the direct involvement of individual academics and of scientific communities in the definition of new criteria and processes (ARRA, 2022, pp. 3, 5, 6, 9), but academic communities should assume collective ownership and control over the infrastructures necessary for successful reform. This last point is not as prominent in the ARRA as it should have been – and should be a central governing principle in the future CoARA.”

The following presentation will address two questions:

  1. Did COARA take Francesca Di Donato’s suggestions seriously?
  2. If not, why not? Simple reluctance or deeper structural reasons?

1. Promises unkept?

The first sections of Francesca Di Donato’s article report on the origins and principles of the Agreement on Reforming Research Assessment (ARRA), on the basis of which the COARA coalition was formed.

It is worthy of note that the whole process was initiated by the EU Commission and supported by the EU Council, and gained momentum when the Covid-19 pandemic showed that the current system of research evaluation ensures neither accessibility nor quality of science – precisely because it is mainly based on the quantity of publications and citations.

Certainly, the EU Commission and the European Council relied on a mass of scholarly studies, both independent and commissioned, on the basis of which they promoted the reform of research assessment. It is difficult to deny, however, that their political intervention was not merely infrastructural, as Kant demanded in the above quote, but was intended to affect the very core of scientific activity, namely the way in which scientists evaluate their work.

When research evaluation is in the hands of bureaucratic and more or less centralized agencies, the greatest flaw of bibliometrics – the idea that scientific literature can be evaluated without reading and understanding it, using quantitative criteria that are easy to game – becomes a virtue. Peer review, based on the living craftsmanship of scientists debating among themselves, cannot be used as a weapon of mass evaluation, because it does not scale. Therefore, the abolition of bibliometrics as an evaluation tool would also imply the abolition or strong reduction of huge and powerful centralized evaluation agencies such as the Italian ANVUR or the Spanish ANECA.

Since even centralized evaluation agencies such as ANVUR and ANECA could join COARA and sit on its steering committee, there should be some ambiguity and compromise in the ARRA principles.

As reported by Francesca Di Donato, the second ARRA commitment, qualitative assessment, requires that research be evaluated by reading and discussing scientists’ work rather than by counting it. This commitment, in other words, emphasizes the centrality of peer review as part of a public scientific debate that should itself be an object of research rather than a ritual.1 In addition, the third commitment advocates “responsible metrics” by abandoning “the inappropriate use of indicators such as JIF and h-index”.

And yet, when COARA was accused of the hideous sin of “bibliometric denialism“, some prominent COARA members felt it necessary to defend it against such an accusation. They answered by trying to balance qualitative and quantitative evaluation.

Using scientometrics alone for assessments at lower levels of granularity, i.e., for the assessment of individuals, including consequential purposes such as allocating rewards (funding, jobs), is highly problematic. In such cases, peer review should be preferred.

However,

the use of scientometrics at higher levels of aggregation, such as country or university level, and for less consequential forms of assessment such as for scholarly understanding, is far less problematic (if still imperfect).

They also showed awareness of the trickle-down effect of bibliometrics in general, which is well known to Italian researchers. If the institutions in which they work are evaluated and funded on the basis of quantitative criteria, researchers will be pressured to follow bibliometrics, despite any commitment to its responsible use.

The fact remains that an over-reliance on even responsible scientometrics can still have a negative impact on the research evaluation ecosystem due to trickle-down effects. The legitimate use of bibliometrics to understand country-level activity can soon end up illegitimately in promotion criteria if too much reward is associated with bibliometric assessments at higher levels of aggregation.

Although seemingly reassuring, this balanced response reveals that COARA does not want to eliminate bibliometrics as a weapon of mass evaluation, nor the centralized agencies that depend on it.

Regarding the trickle-down effect, the response cites Principle 9 of the Leiden Manifesto for the responsible use of bibliometrics, which states that such an effect can be avoided by adopting “a set of indicators” rather than “a single one” that invites “gaming and goal displacement (in which the measurement becomes the goal)”. In other words, the Leiden solution against the gaming of quantitative indicators is the technocratic idea of multiplying them in order to make gaming more difficult.

But why can quantitative indicators be gamed? Just because researchers subjected to them are inherently evil and need to be harnessed with solutionist solutions? Or because bibliometric indicators, at any level of “granularity”, are only orthogonally related to research quality, even though they are indispensable to centralized bureaucracies that are incapable of reading and understanding science as it is not only written, but also done? Indeed, if administrators subjugate2 them under evaluation criteria that cannot grasp the substance of science, it is easier to explain how researchers can be tempted to game the system for the sake of either their careers or their sheer academic survival, even without assuming that they are particularly evil.

COARA did not include commercial publishers in its coalition because of their inherent conflict of interest in favor of journal-based evaluation systems. However, it does not seem to have perceived the conflict of interest in favor of bibliometrics as a weapon of mass evaluation inherent in centralized evaluation agencies such as ANVUR or ANECA, which were accepted not only as members but even as possible candidates of its steering board. COARA’s response to the accusation of “bibliometric denialism” suggests that this may have been done on purpose: there would indeed be no conflict of interest if the reform of research evaluation were not intended to jeopardize state evaluation and its bibliometric weapons.

On the other hand, COARA’s emphasis on qualitative evaluation might suggest that its goal is (also) to downgrade mass (and quantitative) evaluation in favor of peer review. If, however, centralized evaluation agencies that want to maintain their power are represented in COARA’s steering board, this could create an unnoticed conflict of interest and make their downscaling very difficult.3

2. Quality and freedom

In the language of COARA quality is linked to peer review and is an alternative to bibliometrics. While bibliometrics is the weapon of mass evaluation of choice for bureaucracies unable to understand science, qualitative evaluation is associated with free and open discussion among (expert) peers and thus with open science.

Many international and national organizations have taken the trouble to define and recommend it: in a research system deeply shaped and distorted by weapons of mass evaluation, administrators still seem to feel entitled to tell scientists how to do their work.4 Even without the looming presence of COARA’s “responsible” bibliometrics, the trap of bureaucracy with its normalizing power seems difficult to avoid, so that the only quality we can hope for is the one standardized in the concept of quality control.

The modern scientific revolution was not a decision made by monarchs or a high-ranking administrators. According to Paul David, the idea of science as a common good, based on collaboration and funded by aristocratic patrons, is rooted in a pre-capitalist and less bureaucratized world. If we want to loosen the grip of bureaucracy that leads to research without quality, we cannot conceive openness as an administrative task. In fact, the goal is not to make a lot or resources open for business,5 but to maintain or recreate conditions that allow scientific communities to improve the quality of their work through free collaboration and criticism.

3. Quality: an elusive definition

According to Wilhelm von Humboldt, whose university reform the European Union has almost dismantled through the Bologna process, “it is a peculiarity of the higher scientific institutions that they always treat science as a problem that has still not been fully resolved and therefore remain constantly engaged in research“. This is why the definition of quality in science is so elusive for finite rational beings, who, as such, have no general formula of truth.

The question of the definition of quality is at the heart of The Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert M. Pirsig.

The first attempt of solution is refusing to deal with the definition as a theoretical problem and trying to attain it practically. This is the experiment undertaken by Phaedrus, the alter ego of Pirsig at Bozeman: abolish grades and ask students to judge papers day by day. At the end of the experiment, he discovered that students tended to imitate each other and the teacher. It is not surprising: if you rely on practice without any effort of theoretical reflection, what do you get? Only fashion, whose whims cannot be reduced to a concept, but can only be imitated.

Paradoxical as it may seem, this is also the hubris of the bibliometric research evaluation: why bother to look for the elusive and not-scalable quality of research when we can easily calculate its impact, namely its fashionability? Pirsig, however, avoided this hubris by conceiving the scientific method as the way in which rational but finite beings can approach quality. While it cannot attain Truth, it can help to select a single (and perhaps provisional) truth from among many hypothetical truths. But to understand its process, one must be part of it: one cannot be a bureaucrat who, however “responsibly”, annotates the “impact” of something he cannot and will not understand.

Therefore, also when we need to use static patterns of quality for punctual evaluations – for example, when recruiting researchers or selecting projects for funding – we should be aware that, however transparent and verifiable they may be, they do not do justice to the whole process, which is not static but dynamic.

For this reason, as Kant shows in the Conflict of Faculties, universities and research institutions cannot be bureaucratic institutions at the service of “truths” administratively established without jeopardizing the credibility of science. Therefore, within the university, freedom of public criticism is not just a privilege: it is the very condition of the possibility of an institutional scientific research. This freedom does not mean the power to give orders, as in hierarchical organizations, but rather the possibility of challenging the government and the scholars working at its service.

Rational but finite beings cannot allow truth to be established by political powers or by scholars acting as ministers in their service without delegitimizing government and suppressing the pursuit of truth itself. Hence

to the question: who evaluates? Kant responds, the scientific community, because only scientists can judge scientists. If it were to be altered by reasons external to its own reason, namely the search for truth, science would no longer be such

4. EU, or the Elusive Union

According to Kant, politicians should be concerned with the infrastructure of research and not with the way in which researchers carry out their research. Caesar non est supra grammaticos.

Many EU administrators like to present themselves as Kantian, at least in their statements of values. But, in planning ARRA and COARA, they hardly followed his advice.

  1. They discovered, albeit belatedly, that a quantitative evaluation undermines the quality of research.
  2. To solve this problem, they assembled a loose coalition of universities, research institutions, learned societies and evaluation agencies with the task of promoting a reform of research evaluation, as if the dominance of bibliometrics and the consequent damage to research quality were the result of decisions made exclusively by researchers.

Kantian politicians would have done the opposite. First, they would have avoided interfering with the evaluation of research, because “Caesar non est supra grammaticos”. Second, they would have examined whether there were infrastructural conditions that a political action could have improved. They would have discovered that the “irresponsible” use of bibliometrics as a weapon of mass evaluation is linked to centralized evaluation agencies like ANVUR and ANECA. Finally, they would have exercised their legitimate authority to enact a single law: one that would eliminate or minimize any form of centralized administrative evaluation of research under the jurisdiction of state or corporate bureaucracies.

In the conundrum of short-sightedness and conflicts of interest affecting COARA, the original sin may be the overlap of administrative power and research – a sin that the elusive Union seems to have neither the strength nor the awareness, or even the will, to redeem. And COARA alone certainly cannot do what the EU legislator had neither the spirit nor the courage to do.

Accessi: 186

GDPR could protect us from the AI Act. That is why it is under attack

Draghi a guardia di tesori So-called ‘AI’ is a derivative of a surveillance business model that allows Big Tech to provide extrajudicial surveillance services for both civil and military purposes. In countries where such generalised and pervasive surveillance is banned, Big Tech has spread a family of narratives – including the myths of technological exceptionalism and legal vacuum – to evade the law and continue to distribute outlawed products. Now, through regulatory capture, Big Tech has produced the AI Act, under which fundamental rights can be violated with impunity as long as there is no foreseeable harm. So Big Tech’s next target is any norm that still protects fundamental rights. Thus, the narrative of an alleged legal vacuum is now replaced by a narrative that, under the pretext of ‘regulatory certainty’ and vague appeals to competitiveness and so-called ‘innovation’, aims to wipe out those regulations that, like the GDPR, still stand in defence of fundamental rights. It is therefore no coincidence that an open letter from major tech companies and Mario Draghi’s report, The future of European competitiveness, almost simultaneously call for the removal of those parts of regulation – such as certain provisions of the GDPR – on whose systematic violation Big Tech’s business model relies. The attacks on the GDPR are sneaky attacks on the fundamental rights that the GDPR protects, not attacks on the alleged obstacles that stifle innovation.
On this neoliberal attack on fundamental rights, Daniela Tafani submits to open peer review her article, GDPR could protect us from the AI Act. That’s why it’s under attack.

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Call for reviewers: Mauro Lenci, “Italian moderates between absolute monarchy and the sovereignty of the people”

Via di mezzo 38, targa con nome della via da Wikimedia CommonsBetween 1843 and 1861, Italian moderates were crucial in the process of the country’s unification. The latest historiography has extensively analyzed their role in all of its internal and international implications and has often emphasized their cultural backwardness in comparison to the major European currents of thought.

On the other hand, the Italian historian Luca Mannori has denounced the inconsistency of portraying Italian liberals as feeble and narrow-minded, vis à vis their mobilization for the constitution involving all of the states of the peninsula in the first few months of 1848. Indeed, their theories proved to be decisive in the transition from the old monarchic and aristocratic world to the new democratic one. Therefore, according to Mauro Lenci, it is worth analyzing their two-faced relation with popular sovereignty, to contribute to understand the neglected political and theoretical reasons of their success.

We are submitting the essay to our experimental open peer review. Commenting is easy: you should simply register here, log in our Commentbfp site, click back to Mauro Lenci’s paper and start writing your remarks.

If you are not familiar with the Commentpress interface we are using, check How to read a Commenpress document on the Commentpress site. If you need more information, ask us.

Mauro Lenci, Scylla and Charybdis: Italian moderates between absolute monarchy and the sovereignty of the people 1843–1861

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Research evaluation and academic freedom: an Italian debate

Particolare della Scuola di Atene di Raffaello The Bollettino telematico di filosofia politica is submitting to an open peer review a couple of articles meant for the debate on the theoretical and practical justification of the Italian research assessment system, which entrusts an academic élite nominated by the government with a huge, unbalanced power. In the opinion of Andrea Bonaccorsi, a former member of the Italian National Agency for the Evaluation of the University and Research Institutes board of directors, the governmental evaluation of scientific research can be justified on the basis of his – peculiar – reading of R.K. Merton’s normative sociology of science.

The articles written, respectively, by Roberto Caso and Maria Chiara Pievatolo, scrutinize Bonaccorsi’s claims both from a legal and from a philosophical point of view.

Roberto Caso, in Una valutazione (della ricerca) dal volto umano: la missione impossibile di Andrea Bonaccorsi [The Human Face of Evaluation of Science: the Mission Impossible of Andrea Bonaccorsi], challenges the main argument of Bonaccorsi, according to which the governmental evaluation of scientific research is an expression of Mertonian norms of science (communism, universalism, disinterestedness, organized skepticism). Such an interpretation, in Roberto Caso’s opinion, is untenable for two main reasons:

  • it rests on a remarkable misrepresentation of Merton’ s thought;
  • it neglects the difference between fixed, formal legal rules and fluid, informal norms; hence, it underestimates the effects of a transformation from the former to the latter.

Maria Chiara Pievatolo’s La bilancia e la spada: scienza di stato e valutazione della ricerca [The scale and the sword: science, government and research evaluation] goal is showing that the research assessment system resulting from Bonaccorsi’s misinterpretation of Merton would be both practically despotic and theoretically retrograde even if, at the very moment of the evaluation, the sociological description of the state of the research were true and we lived in a faultless Mertonian world.

The resulting system would be despotic because it would transform an informal ethos into a rigid set of administrative laws outside the researchers’ control; and it would be retrograde because such a set would also freeze the evolution of the ways in which scientists publish, discuss and assess their works, in a kind of enchanted Sleeping Beauty castle.

Both articles are in Italian: nostra res agitur. You may review them on SJScience.org, here and here.

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The ambassadors’ honor: a citation policy for open access

The authors whose works are openly accessible make a public use of reason. The ones that prefer closed access make a private use of it. They do not address themselves to the citizens of the world through the best media technology available: they talk only to the restricted group of people who can afford to pay. Usually authors choose closed access either because they are accustomed to follow the publishing practices of their scholarly communities without thinking too much, or because they fear that their career could be damaged by a way of publishing still perceived as uncommon. Their theater of action, here, is not a virtually universal public sphere: it is a particular set of institutions.

Citations are the currency in the trade of science communication. When I build my thesis upon the ideas of others, they are useful both to pay my debts and to display the soundness of my credit: my voice resonates louder if I back it with the literature assets I withdrew from the big bank of learning.

Moreover, citations are the raw matter of bibliometrics, which may be crucial to research evaluation, career advancements and libraries purchase policies. In such a use, citations are currency not only metaphorically, but also in a very literal sense.

Besides, in a paper published on the web, citations, as links, are money in the meaning of the attention economy: every time I link a resource, I increase its value, by boosting its search engine rank and making it more visible. And, as Open Access brings an increased citation impact, a citation in an openly accessible article is a wonderful present.

If the cited document is openly accessible as well, such a citation is a token of gratitude for the very gift of its presence. However, can we say the same about closed access papers?

According to George Monbiot’s Guardian recent article, academic publishers “are the most ruthless capitalists in the Western world”: they exploit the work of researchers and reviewers without paying them; they privatize their product, which is publicly funded by research grants and academic stipends, and they sell it to its very producers for outrageous prices. Why should open access authors advertise their journals for free and without reciprocity, for the sake of their profit?

The recommendation to cite only openly accessible resources would be radical but unfair. The oligopolists of academic publishing are inclined to make us believe that the worth of our contents depends on where they have been published (Björn Brembs, What’s wrong with scholarly publishing today? slide 87): we cannot make the same mistake, by ruling out that a really good idea might appear even in a closed access site. Therefore, we have to figure out a kind of harm reduction citation policy, with some changes to the current practices.

  1. Give always preference to open accessible literature over closed access items;
  2. always cite the documents archived in open access institutional or disciplinary repositories even when there is a closed access version of them;
  3. if ideas are relevant regardless of their authors, always cite an openly accessible paper that contains them, even if you have to prefer the article of a Ph. D. candidate over the latest book of some well-known academic star;
  4. if the closed access resource is irreplaceable, do not cite it directly, but mention the openly accessible papers reporting and reviewing its content. If they are missing, write a short, openly accessible report about it, stressing that, if it is the case, the access to it is closed and behind a paywall whilst it could have been open.

A second hand citation leaves almost unchanged the citation impact of the text and it has another major merit.

In an environment of increasing information overload, curators – or trail blazers in the meaning of Vannevar Bush – play a creative role: they suggest which way to turn, reduce complexity by means of standards more sophisticated and human than popularity based algorithms, create new ideas from the combination of already known concepts. Just for this reason only, they deserve to be given credit.

However, the curators who expound the content of a closed access resource in an openly accessible site, add something still more important: they make free for the public use of reason something that was captive of its private use; they speak in light what was told in darkness and publish upon the housetops what they heard in the ear. In this regard, they are the actual scholars, because they are the ones telling the citizens of the world something that the nominal authors reserved for the chosen few blessed with money.

According to the current scholarly practices, second hand citations are deprecated because they make people suspect we did not read the cited text, especially if they contain the same inaccuracies of the copied citation. The proposed citation policy does not comply with such a rule. Second hand citations are right and proper when they are not due to the laziness of the citing person, but to a choice, sometimes unwitting, of the cited authors. If they prefer to speak to the few and in behalf of someone while they could speak to everyone and in behalf of everyone, they must become aware that they are declining to enter into the public sphere first-hand as well. That they have to accept the mediation – not necessarily accurate and well-meant – of others taking away their merit. For today’s public use of reason is in the open access.

The present proposal is a reaction to the still prevailing publishing practices in the field of human and social sciences and to the still lingering lack of awareness of a wide portion of the Italian scholarly community. Do you have better solutions? They are welcome.

–dnt

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Edmund Burke and the issue of a conservative and liberal tradition in Italy, 1791-1945 – Call for Reviewers

We are submitting the article Edmund Burke and the issue of a conservative and liberal tradition in Italy, 1791-1945 by Mauro Lenci to an experimental open peer review.

Commenting is easy: you should simply register here, log in our Commentbfp site, click back to Mauro Lencii’s paper and start writing your remarks.

If you are not familiar with the Commentpress interface we are using, check How to read a Commenpress document on the Commentpress site. If you need more information, ask us.

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Accessi: 495