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Backlog (academic journals)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In academic publishing, the word backlog usually refers to the phenomenon that a journal has a number of accepted papers waiting to be published for a significant time.[1]

Usage of the term

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The backlog is usually described in months; for instance, a certain journal could have a backlog of 12 months, which means that on average it takes one year for the journal to publish a paper that has been accepted. This waiting time adds on top of the time between initial submission and acceptance of a paper, which can also vary.

Some journals have a backlog of more than a year, which is usually caused by the journal's editors' decision to accept more or longer papers than the journal publishes in a certain time interval.

The American Mathematical Society publishes a list of the backlog of mathematical journals each year in the November issue of the Notices.[2]

If a journal has a heavy backlog, this might have the effect that the journal is less likely to accept papers in the future, or even reject all manuscript submissions temporarily.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Robin Derricourt (1996). An Author's Guide to Scholarly Publishing. Princeton University Press. pp. 176. JSTOR j.ctv39x78v.
  2. ^ "Backlog of Mathematics Research Journals" (PDF).
  3. ^ "Journal with two-year publication backlog refuses submissions". 2018-08-20.