Published today, Perceptions of fairness and bias in the scholarly publishing ecosystem: a global survey, is a new report from Springer Nature, sharing insights from a global survey of over 8,000 researchers on how they perceive bias and where they believe it shows up in the publication process.
The global research landscape has diversified dramatically in the past decade. Researchers from emerging regions now represent an ever-greater share of research output, yet benchmarking shows that some of the most active countries producing research – especially China and India – remain underrepresented among academic external editors who are usually also practicing researchers in universities, editorial boards, and peer reviewers. This disparity risks reinforcing country-related bias in publishing outcomes.
These disparities are not unique to any single publisher, and for that reason, this research engaged a broad international community of researchers. The sheer number of responses from researchers is an indication of the strength of feeling on this topic. The findings are clear: most researchers perceive bias in the publishing process, and that this is especially strongly felt in relation to the region and location of the researcher(s), followed by affiliation and network bias. Experience or perceptions of bias affect researchers’ trust and their decisions about where to publish. Encouragingly, researchers also believe that publishers have both the responsibility and the means to act.
At Springer Nature, we are committed to supporting our editors and reviewers in recognising and reducing bias, to ensure a fair peer review process as well as a more complete and representative global knowledge base. We continue to advance our efforts across key areas identified by researchers in this survey: increasing the regional diversity of our external academic editors to better reflect the global diversity of the research landscape, expanding bias awareness training for editors, increasing transparency through initiatives such as transparent peer review (now available across all Nature family journals and the BMC Series journals) and supporting authors with language-focused services.
We hope these findings stimulate discussion, reflection and collective action to broaden participation and create greater inclusion and fairness in research publishing.