Gatekeeping refers to the control over who is allowed to access, contribute to, and be recognized within academic structures โ€” including publication, funding, conferences, and institutional prestige.

  • Peer review bias โ€“ Preference for established names, conventional ideas, or prestigious affiliations.
  • Editorial filtering โ€“ Journal editors acting as arbiters of what counts as โ€œimportantโ€ or โ€œpublishable.โ€
  • Funding gatekeepers โ€“ Grants often awarded to researchers with existing networks or popular topics.
  • Conference exclusivity โ€“ Invitations and visibility often reserved for insiders.
  • Credential barriers โ€“ Access to publication or positions often tied to specific degrees or institutional pedigree.

Gatekeeping can:

  • โœ… Preserve standards โ€” when transparent and fair.
  • โŒ Suppress innovation โ€” when driven by hierarchy or groupthink.
  • โŒ Create echo chambers โ€” where only mainstream or โ€œsafeโ€ voices are heard.
  • โŒ Marginalize dissent โ€” making it hard for new or critical voices to emerge.

Example: A committee of prestigious surgeons publishes a broad, superficial review in a high-impact journal, not for its content but because of who they are. This fills the academic space and discourages more technically rigorous but less prestigious voices.


Bottom line: Gatekeeping decides *who gets to speak*, *who gets heard*, and *who remains invisible* in the academic world.

  • gatekeeping.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/15 20:32
  • by administrador