Like Good Article and Featured Article nominations, submissions to WikiJournals organise feedback on an article. In the case of the WikiJournals, however, peer reviewers are non-wikipedian experts, invited to provide external feedback and recommendations for the article. Articles that pass peer review also have a stable, citable, indexed version published in the journal, gain a DOI number, and become searchable in Google Scholar. For example:
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Further info
Discussion | ||
Nomination procedure To submit an existing Wikipedia article or article section to one of the WikiJournals for academic peer review, simply add the name of the article to the Nominations section below. In doing this you assert that:
Submission processing
Note: The version published in the journal is static, but the Wikipedia article continues in the normal way and is not locked or owned. |
Like Good Article and Featured Article nominations, submissions to WikiJournals organise feedback on an article. In the case of the WikiJournals, however, peer reviewers are non-wikipedian experts, invited to provide external feedback and recommendations for the article. Articles that pass peer review also have a stable, citable, indexed version published in the journal, gain a DOI number, and become searchable in Google Scholar. For example:
|
Further info
Discussion | ||
Nomination procedure To submit an existing Wikipedia article or article section to one of the WikiJournals for academic peer review, simply add the name of the article to the Nominations section below. In doing this you assert that:
Submission processing
Note: The version published in the journal is static, but the Wikipedia article continues in the normal way and is not locked or owned. |