{% extends 'scipost/base.html' %} {% load staticfiles %} {% load scipost_extras %} {% block pagetitle %}: Editorial College By-laws{% endblock pagetitle %} {% block breadcrumb %}
Functioning of the SciPost Editorial Colleges is governed by the following set of by-laws.
These complement and are subsidiary to the legal statutes (official version, in Dutch) of Stichting SciPost (hereafter: the Foundation).
An Editorial College is formed for each academic field in which SciPost carries out publishing activities. The Editorial College of a certain field, composed of a collection of Fellows, takes end responsibility for editorial matters for all Journals operating in that field. For interdisciplinary submissions, the services of Fellows from distinct Colleges can be called upon during the evaluation process.
Fellows of an Editorial College must be professionally active academics with a permanent position of at least associate professor level or equivalent at a recognized university or research institute. They must possess an extensive publication record demonstrating world-leading research capabilities in at least one stated subject area covered by SciPost Journals falling under the Editorial College concerned. There is no age limitation.
Guest Fellows, whose services can be called upon for Core- or Proceedings-class journals, should be professionally active academics with a position equivalent to junior faculty at a recognized university or research institute. The must possess a solid publication record demonstrating international-level research capabilities in at least one stated subject area covered by SciPost Journals falling under the Editorial College concerned. There is no age limitation. Guest Fellows are only given editorial tasks for specific submissions, and are not officially part of the Editorial College.
The size of an Editorial College will be such that each stated subject area will be represented by at least 8 Fellows. There is no maximum. The number of Fellows caring for a stated subject area shall be adjusted to ensure a workload per Fellow limited to approximately one half-day per month on average.
SciPost's Editorial Colleges should be representative of their respective field's academic communities. They are meant to be self-sustaining in scale and composition.
If the number of Fellows in a stated specialty is below the required minimum number, or if the number of currently available Fellows in a stated specialty has diminished to a level where processing of Submissions becomes delayed, the Foundation has the right to directly nominate and immediately appoint individuals deemed to fulfil the eligibility criteria.
Foundation board members, members of the Advisory Board as well as current and past Fellows of an Editorial College can nominate candidates for an Editorial Fellowship. In addition, guest Fellows which have proved to be reliable Editors-in-charge for Core- or Proceedings-class Submissions can also be nominated by Editorial Administration on behalf of the Foundation. Candidates must fulfil the eligiblity criteria.
These nominations shall be forwarded to the relevant Editorial College for voting, at the latest at the next Virtual General Meeting. If a candidate secures a positive vote from at least half of the Fellows currently caring for the candidate's stated main expertise, and if no veto is received from Fellows in other subject areas, from the Advisory Board or from the Foundation's Board, then the candidate is deemed elected, and is invited to join by the Foundation. Appointment to an Editorial College starts immediately upon receipt of a positive answer from the candidate.
An appointment as Fellow of an Editorial College is in principle for a period of five years.
The composition of an Editorial College is made public. The list of Editorial Fellows and their stated expertises is published on the Colleges page.
An appointment is renewable without limitation. A Fellow coming to the end of an appointment is automatically put up for renewal, unless the said Fellow has informed the Foundation of their desire not to renew, or if the Foundation or the Advisory Board vetoes the renewal.
Appointment as an Editorial Fellow immediately ends upon:
Editorial Colleges, consisting of internationally-distributed scientists with a broad geographic distribution, do not physically meet. Meetings are instead organized using our online forums/meetings facilities.
Once per year, Fellows of the Editorial Colleges are asked to participate in a virtual general meeting. The meeting is organized by the Foundation and takes place over the course of one week during the month of January.
For the VGM, a special web page is activated, which is accessible only to Fellows, members of the Advisory Board, Foundation Board members and SciPost Administration. This page contains items and points of discussion put forward by the Foundation, Advisory Board and Editorial Fellows, and can be consulted and acted upon by Board members and Fellows at their own leisure during the week of the meeting. The meeting is chaired by the Foundation's chairman. During the week of the meeting, Fellows are able to comment on individual items and bring forth motions for voting. Re-elections, new nominations to the College and suggested amendments to the By-laws must appear among the items at the meeting.
At the end of the week, the meeting is closed, and motions are put forward for voting, which is open online for one week after the end of the VGM.
Within one week following the end of voting, the Foundation sets to work implementing the decisions taken and releases the minutes of the VGM to the Advisory Board and Editorial College.
At any time, the Foundation can call an Extraordinary Virtual Meeting, to discuss pressing issues. This meeting must be announced at least one week before its scheduled start. An EVM otherwise follows the same procedures as a VGM.
The primary responsibility of the Editorial Colleges is to run the editorial process for submissions to SciPost Journals. The Colleges shall strive towards the very highest standards of professionalism at all stages of the refereeing process.
Incoming Submissions are added to the field-specific pool of manuscripts under consideration for publication. This pool is visible to all members of the relevant Editorial College (with the exception of Fellows flagged for potential conflict of interest with the authors or the contents of the incoming Submission), as well as to the Advisory Board and Foundation. Each item in the pool represents a single Submission's whole history, including possible earlier (pre-resubmission) versions.
Submissions in the pool can be in any of the following stages:
For each Submission added to the pool, a thorough plagiarism check is performed by SciPost's Editorial Administration. Appropriate action (immediate rejection; request to authors for modified version) is taken if necessary. A thorough scan is performed to flag potential conflicts of interest of authors with Fellows, and a list of potential Editors-in-charge is preselected based on expertise and availability.
Special provisions exist for certain classes of Journals:
The preselected Fellows are sent an assignment request to become Editor-in-charge. Other Fellows within the Editorial College do not receive an assignment request but can still view a Submission's details (and volunteer to become Editor-in-charge) through their visibility rights on the Submissions pool.
Each assigned Fellow can explicitly decline the assignment, stating a reason among: too busy, away, conflict of interest, cannot give impartial assessment, insufficiently qualified, not interested or this paper should not even be considered. If the preselected list of Fellows empties and the submission has still not been taken charge of, the preselection list is extended and new assignment requests are sent to different Fellows. If 5 assignments are declined citing lack of interest reasons, the Submission is returned to the authors and not considered for further processing towards publication.
The Editorial College and Administration must make all reasonable efforts to ensure that the pre-screening process be completed within 5 working days starting from the moment of submission. If this proves impossible (for example due to a large influx of Submissions or current unavailability of specialist (guest) Fellows), the authors are informed of the delay and given the option of either withdrawing their Submission, or of accepting an extension to the duration of their Submission's pre-screening process.
The first Fellow of the Editorial College (or, for Core- or Proceedings-class Journals, guest Fellow) who accepts an assignment, or who volunteers while perusing the pool, becomes Editor-in-charge of the Submission, under the conditions that:
In the case of a Resubmission, the original Submission's Editor-in-charge is automatically appointed as Editor-in-charge for the Resubmission.
Upon explicit request by the Editor-in-charge, or in circumstances in which the editorial processing of a given Submission is suffering from unreasonable delays, the Editorial Administration reserves the right to seek a replacement Editor-in-charge for that Submission.
Upon appointment, the Editor-in-charge can choose one of the following cycles:
For first-time submission, the choice is between the default refereeing cycle, or for a direct Editorial Recommendation for rejection. For resubmission, all three choices are available, the short cycle being meant for rapid re-consultation of referees from previous rounds. Upon choosing either the direct or short refereeing cycles, the online Submission Page is automatically created and opened for contributed Reports and Comments, and the Editor-in-charge is required to immediately open a refereeing round.
For the default or short cycles, a refereeing round must be opened. For a default refereeing cycle, at least 3 referees must be invited to provide a Report. For the short cycle (exclusively meant for resubmissions), at least one of the previous referees must be reinvited. Referees can accept or decline the invitation; if a referee declines or fails to commit within 5 working days, the Editor-in-charge must seek an alternative referee.
The indicated duration of a refereeing round in the default cycle is 4 weeks for normal papers and 8 weeks for Lecture Notes, counted from the moment one of the invited referees first accepts to provide a report. For the short cycle, the duration is 2 weeks. Referees will automatically be sent reminders of impending deadlines.
Besides the invited Reports, contributed Reports and Comments can also be provided by registered Contributors. Although anonymity can be requested by the Contributor, this implements anonymity on the public interface only: the identity of the authors of all contributed material is accessible to Editorial Administration and to the Editor-in-charge of the Submission. It is forbidden for them to reveal those identities in any way, except to non-conflicted members of the Editorial College or of the Advisory Board if it is deemed necessary.
The Editor-in-charge must ensure that referees they invite to report on a given manuscript are in particular not in conflict of interest, personal or hierarchical relationship with any of the authors and more generally fulfil the conditions stated in the referee obligations. Similarly, the Editor-in-charge must verify that the authors of contributed Reports and Comments also fulfil these conditions (this occurring during vetting of the Report). If in doubt, the Editor-in-charge must disregard the Reports and Comments in question when formulating the Editorial Recommendation. The Editorial Administration monitors the correctness of the implementation of these conditions.
Two types of Reports are considered: invited and contributed, respectively from Editor-in-charge-invited or from volunteer referees. Moreover, upon vetting, the Editor-in-charge determines whether a Report is substantial (if it reviews the Submission in a thorough and complete manner) or fractional (if it covers only some aspects). The minimal number of Reports required for the Editor-in-charge to make a recommendation depends on the Journal which is submitted to:
If none of the invited referees have responded within the first round, the Editor-in-charge must start a second round and invite three new referees. If no invited or contributed Report has been obtained at the end of the second round, the Editor-in-charge can elect to put forth a motion of rejection due to lack of interest, or to extend the refereeing round.
Authors are informed by email upon any Report being published. Authors can reply to Reports at any point by submitting an Author Reply. These replies should focus on addressing the Report (rather than providing a list of changes as per a resubmission).
At the end of the refereeing period, submission of Reports on the Submission Page is deactivated. The Editor-in-charge can (but is not obliged to) invite the authors to finalize their responses to any submitted Reports and Comments before the Editorial Recommendation is formulated.
An Editorial Recommendation is formulated by the Editor-in-charge at the end of a refereeing round. The recommendation is based on the invited Reports, eventual contributed Reports, eventual Comments together with the Editor-in-charge's own assessment of the Submission. Such a recommendation is not made publicly visible. The recommendation targets a specific journal, and can be for:
A recommendation for Publication or Rejection is immediately forwarded to the Editorial College for voting. It is at this stage not communicated to the authors.
If the Editorial Recommendation is for a minor or major revision, it is communicated directly to the authors, who must then resubmit in order for further processing to take place. Upon resubmission, the Editor-in-charge can either start a new refereeing round or directly formulate a new editorial recommendation.
The decision to publish or reject a paper is formally taken by the relevant Editorial College. After being formulated by the Editor-in-charge, the Editorial Recommendation is made visible to all non-conflicted Fellows.
A number of Fellows (depending on the Journal) is selected by Editorial Administration and specifically given voting rights on the Recommendation. This selection is made to ensure sufficient expertise, enforce checks on impartiality and avoid conflicts of interest. Other qualified Fellows can claim voting rights on the Recommendation if they so wish, by contacting Editorial Administration (in the interest of workflow control, not all Fellows are expected to vote on all Recommendations, but rather only on the ones they are given voting rights on).
The voting Fellows are asked to list which outcomes they find appropriate among the following list (they can mark more than one as acceptable):
The result of the vote is determined in the following way: the topmost outcome which a strict majority of non-abstaining Fellows find appropriate, is fixed as the College decision.
Example 1: the Editor-in-charge has formulated a Recommendation for Publication (Tier II). 9 Fellows (including the Editor-in-charge) have been given voting rights. 2 Fellows abstain. 3 Fellows have listed Publication (Tier II) as highest appropriate outcome. 1 has listed Publication (Tier III) as highest appropriate outcome. 3 Fellows have listed Ask for major revision as highest appropriate outcome. The College decision is fixed to Publication (Tier III).
Submissions to a flagship title which are deemed to be of superlative quality and obtain a majority vote for Publication as Tier I are promoted to a special status whereby the main paper is prepared for publication in the field flagship title, and the extended abstract is separately prepared for publication in SciPost Selections.
If the editorial recommendation is to publish the paper (irrespective of the Tier) and voting conditions for acceptance are met, the authors are informed and the paper is immediately forwarded to Production.
If the editorial recommendation was to accept the paper, but the voting conditions for acceptance given above are not met, then the Editor-in-charge is given the opportunity to reformulate the recommendation to either:
If the editorial recommendation is to reject the paper, and the voting procedure supports this, the paper is rejected.
If the recommendation was to reject the paper but voting yields acceptance as a result, then the paper is accepted.
Upon rejection, the authors are informed, the Submission Page is deactivated and its contents removed from public view, unless the authors explicitly request otherwise.
For Proceedings-class Journals, the publication decision process is delegated to the set of guest Fellows associated to the Proceedings Issue concerned. To maintain high quality standards, the field's Editorial College retains rights of regard and veto on any decisions taken by guest Fellows.
Post-acceptance, the paper is handled by the production team, who produce the final version of the manuscript and ensure compliance with publication requirements (including outbound references linking). The final version is assigned a DOI and published online in the appropriate SciPost Journal.
The present By-laws can be amended by: