If you only cite older articles published in your target journal, odds are
the journal has moved on from publishing on that topic (probably because
the topic is no longer of interest to readers), which makes it more likely that
the editor will desk reject. If she does choose to send your paper out for
review, it might be difficult for her to find the right reviewers, because the
people who have published on that topic in her journal are likely to have
moved on to other topics and to get cranky about having to review papers
on it.
If you do not cite articles in your target journal, even if the editor decides
that it is a good fit for that journal, you run the risk of getting reviewers
suggested by a keyword search. For instance, I once had to handle a trade
manuscript which only cited
the works of Jagdish Bhagwati, Paul Krugman,
Marc Melitz, and so on, without citing any work in the journal I was
handling it for (or in any close substitute journal, for that matter). When
they are not familiar with a given topic,
editors start thinking about
reviewers by looking at the references of a paper. Here, the issue is that
Bhagwati, Krugman, and Melitz probably do not have time to referee for
field journals, especially field journals that are not ostensibly about
international trade. So how did I get reviewers? By doing a keyword search
(e.g., “international trade”) in the editorial system. This returned a few
hundred candidate reviewers, and I selected two or three of them. But I am
pretty sure none of those reviewers had seen the paper before. And therein
lies the rub: one of the unfortunate, unstated truths about this profession is
that
network effects sadly matter, and reviewers are more likely to be
favorable toward your paper if they have seen it before, preferably in a
seminar or at a conference where they had an opportunity to ask their
questions about the work.
If you plan on submitting to a field journal,
it is thus important to cite
articles that have been published recently in that or closely related journals.
How about general journals? Here, opinions differ. When submitting to a
top-five journal,
15
it is best to minimize the number of citations to field
journals, because some general-journal editors conclude when they see that
an article citing too many articles in field journals that that article also
belongs in a field journal.
Given the foregoing, two approaches work reasonably well. The first
approach is that you write your paper with a specific target journal in mind,
because you know that that journal has recently been publishing articles on
your topic.
The second approach is to just write the paper without a specific outlet in
mind, but still keeping the average economist in mind. Once you are “done”
writing
your paper, you then look at your list of references. If there are
some field journals you cite more than three times, those are all good
candidates regarding where to submit. Once again, if your work improves
on both the internal validity and external validity fronts, you should start
with a more general economics journal. Know, however, that even the very
best papers have a low probability
of getting into those journals, as the
competition is fierce—and it is getting fiercer.
Dostları ilə paylaş: