A note on notes: On the rise of ‘special sections’ in academic journals
Introduction
In this short paper I explore the rise of ‘special sections’ in academic journals (such as this ‘Note’ section in ephemera). Prior to the 1990s, management journals had two major sections: peer-reviewed articles and book reviews. There was very little published that did not fit into these categories: the occasional obituary, an erratum or retraction, a call for papers, some announcements, and very little else. All this started to change in the 1990s and 2000s with the emergence of special sections, i.e. a designated space within journals designed to host papers that fall outside the purview of a regular article (for an overview, see figure 1).[1] This note reflects on the rise of these special sections: what explains their popularity, and what do they accomplish? I argue that behind their various forms is a collective shame about what journal publishing has become.
In preparing this paper, I interviewed six former and current editors of five different management and organization journals who have been directly involved with special sections. I also had email correspondence with another eight former and current editors about particular special sections. I spoke to the editors about their impressions of the rise of special sections, and about their experiences with the particular sections that they developed or worked with. Additionally, the paper draws on my own experiences as part of the ephemera editorial collective between 2004 and 2013.
What is a special section?
We may characterize a special section as a less defined space within a more defined space, like Freetown Christiania in the city of Copenhagen. Special sections represent an attempt to create a space where the rules of the larger space of which it is part (constituted by the rules of journal article publishing, or Danish law in the case of Christiania) are not in effect. Often this is accomplished by creating a different set of rules, which effectively protect the section from the rules of ‘ordinary’ journal publishing. However, it is not always clear what the rules of special sections are. In some cases, the rules that govern special sections are negative, in that they neutralize the ‘normal’ rules but do not themselves provide the section with clear guidelines for content. In other cases, the types of contributions that special sections call for are also positively defined.
An example of a purely negative definition is M@n@gement’s section ‘Carte Blanche’, which, as the name suggests, gives authors complete freedom to do whatever they wish to do: any normal rules are suspended and the editorial police is off-duty. The only catch is that you have to be a ‘world-class scholar’ who writes upon invitation of the editor.
For many journals, special sections are specifically designed to offer something that cannot be offered, or is too rarely offered, through regular articles. The main point, then, is that papers published in special sections don’t look like typical academic papers. Hence, ephemera’s ‘Note’ section is ‘outside of the constraints of a traditional academic article’ (ephemera, 2016); papers in the ‘Peripheral Vision’ section of Organization Studies, ‘are not part of the mainstream of the field – and by being so, they will hopefully challenge organizational researchers to think differently’ (EGOS, 2016); papers published in Organization’s ‘Speaking Out’ are ‘written to challenge contemporary orthodoxies’ (Organization, 2016); and Journal of Management Inquiry’s ‘Generative Curiosity’ is dedicated to ‘ideas’ which, according to the section-editors, are a rare bird in management journals (Stackman and Hannah, 2017). As these descriptors suggest, special sections tend to distinguish between traditional publications and more novel papers – papers that often, implicitly or explicitly, challenge the stuff that happens in the normal section.
Some of the editors I spoke to distinguish between the ‘rigour’ that constitutes regular publishing and the ‘novelty’ and ‘creativity’ that is offered by special sections. In this narrative, there is nothing wrong with regular publishing as such (it’s of a high scientific standard, i.e. ‘rigorous’) but it is highly specialized and doesn’t appeal to a broad audience, not even within the walls of the university. This increasing degree of specialization, the narrative continues, has created a demand for different kinds of writing, and special sections are an answer to this demand. Hence special sections are seen as add-ons to ‘normal science’, to use Thomas Kuhn’s (1962) term, bringing something different to the table or opening something up for debate.
For other editors, however, the term ‘rigour’ – shorthand for the standard methodological rules for doing management research – is far too positive to capture the sorry state of ‘normal science’, which, to them, seems formulaic rather than rigorous. For instance, one of the editors I spoke to told me that
the reason why there are increasingly more journals doing new kinds of sections [is] to get away from this very formulaic writing that we tend to have developed over the years. […] In order to break with that very formulaic style of writing, these new sections have come up. (R1)
The difference between qualifying regular articles as rigorous and as formulaic is crucial. The term ‘rigour’ appeals to a certain image of science that holds that science follows rigorous methodological rules, demarcating it from non-science and pseudo-science. The term ‘formulaic’, by contrast, connotes a critical stance towards a mechanical approach to doing research; it is an implicit critique of the very idea that management research is driven by rigour alone. According to those who qualify regular articles as formulaic, the rules that make up the game of science do not only capture methodological rules, but also habits – such as inserting references to ‘existing debates’, i.e. other publications in that journal – that are heavily invested in the citation economy. The exemplar behind ‘normal science’ is here not evaluated positively (as it is in Kuhn) but rather negatively: as something that we ought to move away from.
Figure 1: Overview of special sections in management and organization journal
A recent editorial of Journal of Management Studies, launching the new special section ‘JMSSays’, offers the same dichotomy between a formulaic standard and a more exciting outside. They write that they are ‘strongly of the view that too much management scholarship has become formulaic, sterile and just plain dull’ (Delbridge et al., 2016: 238-239) and express their hope that ‘JMSSays’ will ‘provide a forum for scholarship which is not constrained by the norms of conventional academic research and theorizing’ (Delbridge et al., 2016: 242). The same editorial also mentions ‘institutional pressures’ as the main reason why academics produce dull stuff. This, of course, includes pressures that come from journals themselves (not mentioned in their editorial), especially those journals that are heavily oriented towards journal ranking lists and impact factors (Journal of Management Studies included). One may guess, then, that some editors have excellent reasons to feel embarrassed about the regular stuff that fills the pages of their journal. Perhaps special sections are one way of softening this embarrassment.
A great variety
Despite the common theme of being outside the ordinary, there is great variety among special sections. Indeed, the openness that is called for in terms of submissions to special sections often goes hand in hand with great editorial flexibility in handling these submissions. Some special section submissions are blind peer reviewed, like regular submissions, but many journals treat special sections differently. For instance, papers may only go through one round of review or they are evaluated by special section-editors only. Hence, apart from double-blind review, one can also find variations such as single-blind or one-eyed and two-eyed review. For some sections the review process (or lack thereof) is publicly announced, but for other sections there is no such transparency.
Special sections may or may not be open for the general public of academics (and, occasionally, non-academics).[2] Quite a few special sections are set up as ‘commissioned articles only’ (e.g. Academy of Learning and Education’s ‘Exemplary Contributions’), which – in practice – may mean that they are open to big names only (e.g. Organization Studies’ ‘Vita Contemplativa’) or (especially) open to friends and colleagues of the editors.[3] Other special sections, in contrast, are fully open.
There often is a tension between the formal rules, which you may read on a journal’s website, and actual practices. The influence that editors have in this regard should not be underestimated. One editor of a top-ranked journal I spoke to said: ‘You know, if I really wanted to, I could get everybody from [my university] to write, and then our department would look great’ (R5). Of course, it is a myth to begin with that the review process of regular articles is blind (journal editors often have a great power in steering papers in the ‘right’ direction), but special section papers are even more dependent on editorial preferences, for better and for worse. In a rare public confession, Glassman and Cummings (2011: 352), both former editors of Journal of Management Inquiry, admit that they actively recruited ‘eminent colleagues’, while ‘violating our public commitment that all articles would be double-blind reviewed’.
There is no common function behind formally or informally commissioned papers in special sections. In my experience in ephemera, commissioned notes have been popular especially for issues with a rather small amount of submissions. An editor of a different journal confirms that this is not unique to ephemera: special sections may be useful because ‘you’ve got to fill space’ (R4). But invited submissions, or what we could call ‘red carpet papers’, may also serve to bind big names to a journal. For instance, I spoke to one ‘world-class’ scholar who has published in the earlier mentioned ‘Carte Blanche’ section of M@n@gement. He confided that the paper in question was rejected by other journals because it contained a message that ‘the field does not like to hear’ (R9, email correspondence). The author was also eager ‘to get it out’, as some of its contents was (also) forthcoming in a book. In this way, the author could get a rejected paper through without too much of a hassle, and the journal binds a big name to the journal. A win-win, it may seem.
For a small journal, it can be hard to motivate established scholars to submit their papers. I know quite a few people who would not submit to a low-ranked (but highly regarded) journal like ephemera without the prospect of a trouble-free road to publication. Indeed, as an editor of ephemera I have more than once come across big name scholars who become irritated when their paper gets properly reviewed. In their mind, submitting a paper to a place that doesn’t directly benefit their career or match their status ought to be received as a grand gesture, with (near) immediate acceptance as the only appropriate response. If the editor stands their ground, there is a great pleasure in defying such expectations.
But many journals do try to attract big names to their journals, even when the paper isn’t up to scratch. Special sections, as the space that tends to be governed the least, are a means that journals have at their disposal in achieving this aim. One editor I informally spoke to mentioned that special sections, in his view, are the place where ‘the best and the worst papers get published’. If true, this may well be a consequence of the fact that many special sections are particularly open to big names, who may or may not put effort into their freebie. Anecdotally, I know of one professor who cut-and-pasted something together after being invited to submit to a special section of an ABS 4-rated journal – not always a recipe for (scholarly) success.
Also for the big journals, some with well over a 1000 submissions per year, special sections can be a way to attract prominent scholars who would otherwise not go through the trouble of a tiresome review process. One editor of an ABS 4-rated journal recalls that even with the red carpet in place it can be difficult to fill special sections with special guests:
It was pulling teeth, a lot of people would promise then they would never come through […] it was much harder than I ever dreamed it would be. (R5)
One reason for this difficulty is that papers in special sections are not always taken seriously. For some, special sections are filled with content that is not ‘rigorous’, and therefore do not count as an outlet for research proper. This is at times also reflected on an institutional level. A former editor of Academy of Management Journal recalls that AMJ’s section ‘Research Notes’ was partly terminated for that reason: ‘it sort of devalued/demeaned the papers’ that were published there, because some ‘schools didn’t credit authors for having a “note” in AMJ’ (R11, email correspondence).[4]
The prospect of citations is a final factor that may be at play in special sections, but also here there is no standard. Some sections are set up in the hope that they cite well, while other special sections have been designed without projected returns in citations (e.g. this ‘Note’ section). Even when citation potential is part of the rationale, actuality may not confirm such hopes. Tsoukas (2008: 1095), in his comments as departing editor, admits that papers published in Organization Studies’ ‘Vita Contemplativa’ ‘have not been cited as well as I had hoped’. A low return on investment in citations can also be a reason to cut the section entirely. I attended one meet-the-editor session where the editor of a fairly highly ranked journal (4-star ABS, with aspirations to compete with the most cited journals in the field) proudly announced that they got rid of a special section because it had a negative influence on their impact factor, ‘despite the fact that the readers really liked it’.
Special sections as an expression of collective shame
Despite the variety in special sections and the different functions that they may serve, I believe it is possible to say something about their increasing popularity on a general level: they are an expression of a collective shame for what normal research has become, and they serve as a protective layer for the articles that we have become so ashamed of.
As we have seen, the rise of these sections could be interpreted as a playground within the reality of social science; a free space where the normal requirements of research do not apply. Outside these sections we find ‘real’ social science, and inside these sections we encounter free experimentation with ideas. Special sections, then, are the place where playfulness is allowed to happen.
Equally plausible, however, is the exact opposite thesis: we are all aware that ‘game playing’, this time used pejoratively, really takes place within the ‘normal’ process of journal publication, and that the only way out is to create space for ‘reality’ to re-enter in special sections. Special sections, on this view, are not special at all: they help us remember what normal research ought to look like. Continuing this thought, we may perhaps even say that Organization’s ‘out’ in ‘Speaking Out’ is the scream to re-connect to ‘reality’, to the outside of the games that academics play.
This, of course, is not to say that what happens in ‘normal’ papers is merely a game, and that real research is (today) relegated to special sections. These categories spill over in all directions. My point is to question the existence of the separation between the normal and the special in the first place. As I see it, the creation of special sections helps in coping with our shame, but thereby it also keeps the normal of which we are so ashamed in place.
I already mentioned Kuhn’s concept of ‘normal science’, which, of course, exists only in relation to its counterpart ‘extraordinary science’. We may say that the rise of special sections is a partial resolution of the paradigm debate of the 1980s and 1990s (e.g. is normal science desirable in organization studies? should we be in a permanent state of extraordinary science?). Journals are now both ‘ordinary’ and ‘extraordinary’; ‘normal’ and ‘special’. They have their cake and eat it too. The problem, however, is that ‘extraordinary sections’ are far from a sign that normal science is in crisis, which is what extraordinary science signals in Kuhn. Indeed, the exact opposite is the case: they strengthen ‘normal science’ in its legitimacy.
(No) practical recommendations
I don’t want to end this note with some practical recommendations with regards to special sections. Despite some reservations, I have nothing against special sections per se. Quite the contrary: they usually really are more interesting, through-provoking, readable, creative, and so on, than the normal stuff published in the field.
What I do find problematic is rather the ever-growing need for the distinction between ‘normal articles’ and ‘special papers’ that journals create within themselves (as well as some dubious motivations and practices that inevitably lurk behind the scenes – in spaces that are accessible only to journals editors, journal publishers and a handful of other players). From this perspective, I have great sympathy for two journals in particular: first, Journal of Management Inquiry, which, on paper, turned all its sections into ‘special sections’. In reality two of these sections, ‘Essays’ and ‘Nontraditional Research’, are de facto regular sections that were supposed to give the journal ‘academic legitimacy’ (Glassman and Cummings, 2011: 351). But by refusing to succumb to a strict division between the ordinary and the extraordinary, they maintain an openness in journal publishing that is absent from most other management and organization journals. Second, Culture and Organization’s stoic refusal to adapt to new times: they still have just one section, which remains very open (more open than the few other journals that have never had special sections), which is to say that the articles that are published have not become more formulaic over time (at least not in my reading).
[1] To my knowledge, the only special section that predates the 1990s is the section ‘Research Notes’, which was a regular feature in Academy of Management Journal between 1973 and 2005 and in Organization Studies between 1980 and 2000. We may further note that special issues and Special Research/Topic Forums have a similar history as the special sections discussed in this note: these are journal issues or themed sections ‘outside of the ordinary’. Their popularity also took off in the 1990s (for instance, the first Special Research Forum in Academy of Management Journal was published in 1993 and the first special issue of Human Relations was published in 1994). There is also a more recent trend of virtual issues and ‘best-of-compilations’.
[2] One of the founding editors of ephemera recalls that part of ephemera’s ‘motivation [to include the ‘Note’ section] was to open up to authors not fully entrenched in university discourse’ (R14, email correspondence). In practice, most notes published in ephemera have been written by academics, but also activists and practitioners have found this space.
[3] None of the editors I spoke to admitted to recruiting friends and colleagues for special sections, but it’s an open secret that this is how things often work. Of course, it also goes in the other direction: for instance, I knew my friends were editing this issue, so I suggested this note.
[4] A second reason is that ‘AMJ was such a “big tent” journal (covering the full range of micro and macro topics and receiving so many submissions) [that] we felt some of the more specialized papers (e.g., replications) would be more appropriately placed in journals more specific to their domains’ (R11, email correspondence).
Delbridge, R., R. Suddaby and B. Harley (2016) ‘Introducing JMSSays’, Journal of Management Studies, 53(2): 238-243.
EGOS (2016) ‘Aims and scope’. [http://www.egosnet.org/organization_studies/ aims_and_scope]
ephemera (2016) ‘How to submit’. [http://www.ephemerajournal.org/how-submit]
Organization (2016) ‘Description’. [https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/journal/ organization]
Glassman, A.M. and T. G. Cummings (2011) ‘The wilderness years at JMI’, Journal of Management Inquiry, 20(4): 349-354.
Kuhn, T. (1962) The structure of scientific revolutions. University of Chicago Press: Chicago and London.
Stackman, R. W. and D. R. Hannah (2017) ‘Generative curiosity: Introducing JMI’s newest section’, Journal of Management Inquiry, 26(1): 112-115.
Tsoukas, H. (2008) ‘Thank you and goodbye! Reflections of a departing editor-in-chief’, Organization Studies, 29(8-9): 1085-1107.
Sverre Spoelstra is an affiliate member of ephemera.
Email: sverre.spoelstra AT fek.lu.se