On Wed, 23 Jan 2008, Sandy Thatcher wrote:
"Books are not peer-reviewed." That's an astonishing statement. Every book published by every university press that is a member of the Association of American University Presses has to be peer-reviewed because the guidelines of the AAUP require that member presses maintain such a practice as a condition of membership. Any scholar with a book published by a university press would most certainly list it under "peer-reviewed publications."I've just responded to Jim O'Donnell's comment on this off-list. Because of the phase-lag, I hadn't seen Sandy's follow-up posting. So now I might as well post my off-list reply on-list! Chrs, Stevan
It may not be universally true that books published by commercial publishers are peer-reviewed, simply because no such peer-review practice is mandated for them as it is for university presses. But I know that many commercial publishers do conduct some type of peer review also (though perhaps with more of a focus on identifying viable markets than on the niceties of scholarship). Others representing such publishers on this list can speak for their own houses.
P.S. Notice that I said "published" rather than "distributed." Not all books distributed by presses are necessarily peer reviewed by the press distributing them--as the recent imbroglio surrounding Michigan's distribution of a book from Pluto Press vividly demonstrated.
Hi Jim,Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2008 21:44:27 EST From: James J. O'Donnell <provost -- georgetown.edu> To: liblicense-l -- lists.yale.edu Subject: books Stevan Harnad wrote:Yes, all Green OA self-archiving mandates should specify that they apply to articles published in peer-reviewed journals and peer-reviewed congress proceedings, to be clear that they do not apply to books. But academics know this. Books are vetted for publishability, but they are not peer-reviewed. In an academic CV, one does not list one's books under "peer-reviewed publications."I will save Sandy Thatcher, seasoned and admired university press publisher, from the burden of defending his honorable profession and say that the assertion that "Books . . . are not peer-reviewed" is wild, ludicrous, and entirely untrue. There are surely book-publishing outlets that have weaker peer review standards than others, just as there are journals likewise, but the standard of peer review on reputable university press books is very high.
Jim O'Donnell
Georgetown U.