The peer review system is breaking down. Here’s how we can fix it
The peer review system is breaking down. Here’s how we can fix it
https://theconversation.com/the-peer-review-system-is-breaking-down-heres-how-we-can-fix-it-275317
Publish Date: 2026-02-15 14:13:00
Source Domain: theconversation.com
- Significant challenge of finding qualified peer reviewers in Australian academic journals, impacting both long-term viability of journals and research integrity.
- More than half of surveyed editors (55%) consider finding reviewers a major hurdle with some sending up to 30 invitations to secure two reviewers.
- Consequences of the lack of reviewers include outright rejections of manuscripts and delayed publication timelines, threatening systemic integrity.
- Reasons for decline in review participation include voluntary nature of review, pressure to increase research output amidst university discouragement of peer review roles, and post-COVID shifts impacting effort allocation.
- Efforts to mitigate the shortage include training workshops, reliance on editorial boards, and rejections at an initial screening stage.
- Emerging concern over AI-generated reviews that are deemed ineffective in improving manuscripts.
- Proposed long-term solutions include incentives such as payment or mandatory review requirements, though these are difficult to implement due to the integral nature of peer review in scholarly systems.
- The crisis threatens the viability of local/independent journals and undermines trust in the scientific record.
- Systemic changes requiring recognition and support from universities and research bodies are needed to address the shortage of reviewers and preserve scholarly trust.