Submitted:
22 May 2025
Posted:
26 May 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract

Keywords:
1. Position Overview: Toward a More Inclusive and Authentic Publishing Model
2. Critiques of the Current System
2.1. Gatekeeping and Editorial Subjectivity
2.2. Distorted Academic Priorities from Prestige-Driven Metrics
2.3. Barrier and Equity Issues in Research Accessibility
3. Strategies for Reformation
3.1. Mentorship-Oriented Editorial Practice and Post-Publication Peer Review Model
3.2. Toward Meaningful Research Evaluation
3.3. Democratizing Knowledge Accessibility
4. Anticipated Challenges and Counterarguments
4.1. Fear of Low-Quality Work
4.2. Resistance from Established Stakeholders
4.3. Sustainability Aspect of the Community Repository
5. Conclusion and Call to Action
5.1. Call to Action:
- For Researchers: Resist the pressure to chase prestige and metrics as proxies for worth. Publish what matters to you and your communities, not what aligns with arbitrary rankings or external validation. Respect your own contributions and those of others based on quality, relevance, and impact, not citation counts or journal rankings. By embracing open dissemination, thoughtful mentorship, and transparent review, researchers can foster a more inclusive, intellectually honest publishing culture.
- For Editors and Publishers: For editors, reimagine your roles as mentors rather than gatekeepers. Reassess traditional quality control methods and consider integrating mentorship programs and the post-publication peer review model into your editorial practices. For publishers, invest in sustainable, community-driven models that prioritize access and equity over profit.
- For Academic Institutions and Funding Agencies: Revise evaluation criteria to reward holistic, long-term contributions to scholarship and society. Move beyond journal-based metrics and incentivize open dissemination, methodological rigor, and interdisciplinary research through tenure, promotion, and funding decisions. Support initiatives that enhance community-driven repositories and open licensing policies.
- For Policymakers: Mandate public access to publicly funded research and invest in infrastructure that supports open science. Enact regulations that curb exploitative publishing practices and empower community-owned platforms that democratize knowledge for societal benefit.
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