====== Editorial Indulgence ====== **Definition:** *Editorial indulgence* refers to the tendency of journal editors to **prioritize personal, institutional, or sentimental content** over scientific rigor, often by **publishing articles that would not meet standard peer-review criteria** if submitted by unaffiliated authors. ===== Characteristics ===== * Acceptance of weak or anecdotal submissions from editorial board members or senior figures. * Over-publication of commemorative articles, historical retrospectives, or vanity series. * Minimal critical oversight applied to certain contributors ("editorial immunity"). * Use of journal space for internal legacy building rather than academic advancement. ===== Red Flags ===== ^ Symptom ^ Consequence ^ | Repeated publications by the same institution | Perceived bias and erosion of editorial credibility | | Long, uncritical tributes or autobiographies | Displacement of peer-reviewed scientific research | | Lack of methodological or bibliographic rigor | Weakens the journal's academic reputation | ===== Consequences ===== * Undermines the integrity and fairness of the peer-review process. * Prioritizes prestige, ego, or nostalgia over objective scientific merit. * Contributes to journal padding and reader disengagement. * May lead to reputational damage for the journal in academic circles. ===== Related Terms ===== * Journal padding * Institutional bias * Vanity publishing * Editorial favoritism ===== Application Example ===== * The multi-part series on the "genesis of Academic Neurosurgery" in ''Neurocirugía (Engl Ed)'' can be seen as a case of editorial indulgence, reflecting internal reverence rather than critical historical scholarship.