The Death of Peer Review...?

Crowdsourcing_academia_-_global_human_capital
The_death_of_peer_review-_global_human_capital

 

For professors, publishing in elite journals is an unavoidable part of university life. The grueling process of subjecting work to the up-or-down judgment of credentialed scholarly peers has been a cornerstone of academic culture since at least the mid-20th century.

 

Now some humanities scholars have begun to challenge the monopoly that peer review has on admission to career-making journals and, as a consequence, to the charmed circle of tenured academe. They argue that in an era of digital media there is a better way to assess the quality of work. Instead of relying on a few experts selected by leading publications, they advocate using the Internet to expose scholarly thinking to the swift collective judgment of a much broader interested audience.

 

"What we're experiencing now is the most important transformation in our reading and writing tools since the invention of movable type,” said Katherine Rowe, a Renaissance specialist and media historian at Bryn Mawr College. “The way scholarly exchange is moving is radical, and we need to think about what it means for our fields.”

 

Read more here:

 

Obama to Offer Benefits to Gay Partners of Federal Employees

 

The decision comes as many in the gay community have voiced disappointment with the president, especially after the administration filed a legal brief defending the Defense of Marriage Act.


(Reporting from San Francisco and Los Angeles) - Faced with growing anger among gay and lesbian supporters, President Obama is expected tonight to extend healthcare and other benefits to the same-sex partners of federal employees.


His action is a significant advance for gay rights and comes days after the Obama administration sparked outrage by filing a legal brief defending the law forbidding federal recognition of same-sex marriage. Obama opposed the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act during his presidential campaign.

Read more: http://globalhumanresources.blogspot.com/2009/06/obama-to-offer-benefits-to-gay-partners.html


Tags: Obama, Gay Pride Month, Bill Clinton, Defense of Marriage act, Same-Sex partners, Employee Benefits, Military, Gays in the military, Don’t ask don’t tell policy, Capitol Hill, HR, Human Capital,

 

Ellison Tells Developers Oracle Will Continue to Support Java

Larry Ellison

 

Oracle CEO Larry Ellison said today that he wants to promote wider use of Sun Microsystems' Java software in both consumer and business products — possibly including netbooks or mobile devices — once his company completes its $7.4 billion acquisition of Sun Microsystems later this year.

 

Read more: http://globalcareerdevelopment.blogspot.com/2009/06/ellison-tells-developers-oracle-will.html


 

Stanford: Research Surpasses Investments as Top Revenue Source

By Lisa M. Krieger  

 

Scientific research is re-emerging as the leading contributor to Stanford University's budget, surpassing income from its multibillion-dollar endowment and other investments. The collapse of Wall Street — and Washington's sudden enthusiasm for research — reverses a recent trend, where investment income led all other sources of Stanford's support, according to Stanford Provost John Etchemendy.

 

Read more: http://globalcareerdevelopment.blogspot.com/2009/06/stanford-research-surpasses-investments.html


 

U.S. Inquiry Into Hiring at High-Tech Companies

 

By MIGUEL HELFT

Published: June 2, 2009

 

SAN FRANCISCO — The Justice Department has begun an investigation into whether the recruiting practices of some of the largest technology companies violated antitrust laws, according to several people with knowledge of the investigation.

 

Companies including GoogleYahooApple and Genentech have received formal requests for documents and information related to the inquiry, these people said. Antitrust lawyers said companies that receive such requests are not necessarily targets of an investigation.

 

Read more: http://globalhumanresources.blogspot.com/2009/06/us-inquiry-into-hiring-at-high-tech.html

 

 

India Elects First Woman Speaker

 

India's lower house of parliament has elected Meira Kumar as the first woman speaker to run its male-dominated chamber. Her appointment as presiding officer was announced in New Delhi, the capital, on Wednesday.

 

Kumar, 64, was elected unopposed by India's 543-seat parliament, which has only 59 women members. Kumar's nomination was put forward by the Congress party following their recent victory in general elections.

 

Read more: http://globalhumanresources.blogspot.com/2009/06/india-elects-first-woman-speaker.html


 

Blind Japanese Woman Receives IBM's Top Award

TOKYO (AFP) -

 

US computer giant IBM has named Chieko Asakawa as the first blind engineer -- as well as the first Japanese female -- to receive the company's highest technical honour.

 

Asakawa, 50, was named this week as one of eight Japanese to win the title of IMB Fellow for her achievements in making the Internet widely accessible for visually impaired people.

 

Read more: http://globalhumancapital.blogspot.com/2009/06/blind-japanese-woman-receives-ibm-top.html

 

The Lear Jet Repo Man

 

Business has never been better for the fearless pilot who takes back millionaires' expensive toys.

 

By Marc Weingarten

June 6, 2009 |

 

It was snowing hard when the bank called Nick Popovich. They needed to grab a Gulfstream in South Carolina now. Not tomorrow. Tonight. All commercial and private planes were grounded, but Nick Popovich wasn't one to turn down a job. So he waited for the storm to clear long enough to charter a Hawker jet from Chicago into South Carolina. There was just one detail: No one had told Popovich about the heavily armed white supremacist militia that would be guarding the aircraft when he arrived.

 

But then again, no one had told the militia about Popovich, a brawny and intimidating man who has been jailed and shot at and has faced down more angry men than a prison warden. When Popovich and two of his colleagues arrived that evening at a South Carolina airfield, they were met by a bunch of nasty-looking thugs with cocked shotguns. "They had someone in the parking lot with binoculars," Popovich says, recalling the incident. "When we went to grab the plane, one of them came out with his weapon drawn and tells us we better get out of there." Undeterred, Popovich continued toward the plane until he felt a gun resting on his temple.

 

Read more: http://globalcareerdevelopment.blogspot.com/2009/06/lear-jet-repo-man.html