In our March "how can we help you?" thread, a reader asks:
Can some one explain how the norms for peer review got established in philosophy? I ask because while I'm a philosopher by training, much of my research is very interdisciplinary. As a result, I'm asked to referee for both philosophy journals and journals in the sciences. Science journals typically ask for a review be completed within a week or two, whereas philosophy journals often allow for somewhere around six weeks to hand in a review. For me, refereeing a philosophy paper doesn't take more effort or time than it does to referee a science paper. Both require about the same amount of time/effort, and I generally supply a few pages of notes. This leads me to wonder why philosophy journals give so much more time. Does anyone know the history behind how these norms have been established?
Interesting questions. I don't quite recall where I came across the information, but I seem to recall seeing somewhere that peer-review tends to take longer in a variety of humanities fields compared to in science. I wonder whether there might be a few reasons for this. First, people tend to co-publish with a lot of co-authors in science compared to humanities, where people tend to publish solo–which might leave scientists more time for reviewing papers (indeed, scientists often have well-funded labs with a large number of grad students and junior faculty who collect and analyze data, etc.). Second, perhaps the quality of scientific papers is easier to judge, given the comparative objectivity of scientific methods (e.g., agreement on sound methods of data collection and analysis, etc.) compared to the humanities? Then again, maybe there's some other explanation.
What do you all think? It could be helpful to hear from people who have published in different fields to get their takes!
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