- It seems to me that the Editors in Chief took the wrong approach on the insertion of the disclaimer into the issue. If they truly believe what they say there, the offending paper(s) should not have been published in the first place.
- Assuming that the Editors in Chief acted professionally when the issue originally appeared (i.e. they checked that the articles met the usual scholarly standards), it looks highly likely that some pressure was applied after the issue appeared. That also explains why changes were required to a paper that was already published online.
- We don't know what sort of pressure was brought to bear, or even the nature of it (political, financial, reputational, some sort of blackmail, really who knows).
- The disclaimer as published seems a lousy compromise at best. If heavy handed political or financial pressure was brought to bear, the reasonable response of the Editors in Chief would have been to resist or resign (dependent on the source of the pressure) - for the simple reason that if this succeeds once, it will just happen over and over again.
I am, of course, an Associate of the Philosophy department of the University of Sydney and do not act in any official capacity there, just for clarity’s sake. Complain to them all you like. It can’t lose me any salary.To me, this is one of the main attractions of the 'life of the mind' outside academia. If you're dependent on the system, it will mess with you. Just because it can.
Update: there is an exception to the last bullet point which I've overlooked. What if not only the Journal but also the Editors in Chief received 'libel' threats (the last ones addressed personally)? I rate this as an exception because in that scenario, not publishing the disclaimer and immediate resignation would not have removed the threat. Even so, publishing the disclaimer was still a lousy compromise.
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