====== Editorial Complacency ====== **Definition:** *Editorial complacency* refers to a **state of stagnation or lowered critical standards within a journal’s editorial process**, often resulting in the acceptance of subpar or repetitive content due to lack of oversight, innovation, or editorial vigilance. ===== Characteristics ===== * Routine approval of articles without rigorous peer review. * Tolerance for poorly written, outdated, or redundant manuscripts. * Over-reliance on habitual contributors or institutional affiliates. * Failure to innovate in content, layout, or thematic direction. * Lack of responsiveness to academic feedback or criticism. ===== Red Flags ===== ^ Symptom ^ Consequence ^ | Repetitive topics and predictable formats | Reader disengagement and reduced relevance | | Declining citation impact | Erosion of journal reputation | | Minimal rejection rates | Signal of lax editorial scrutiny | | No response to scientific controversies | Perceived bias or indifference to quality | ===== Consequences ===== * Decreased academic credibility and impact factor. * Missed opportunities for intellectual leadership in the field. * Disengagement of high-quality authors and reviewers. * Risk of the journal becoming a niche echo chamber. ===== Related Terms ===== * [[Editorial fatigue]] * [[Journal stagnation]] * [[Institutional inertia]] * [[Peer-review degradation]] ===== Application Example ===== * A journal that routinely publishes honorary reviews or fragmented historical series without critical depth may be exhibiting signs of editorial complacency, signaling a need for reform in editorial leadership and review practices.