Cabell’s Predatory Journal Blacklist: An Updated Review | Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path | Scoop.it

A couple of years ago, I published in The Kitchen a review of what was then a new productCabell’s Blacklist, a directory of journals that are published using questionable, suspicious, or objectively deceitful and dishonest strategies. The Blacklist was designed to take the place of the controversial Beall’s List, which had recently shut down after being operated out of the library office of Jeffrey Beall for about five years. Beall’s List had offered a mixed bag of benefits and problems from the start, and Cabell’s (publisher of a long-respected serials directory) sought to create a more rigorous and consistent version of the same service.