Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)

The purpose of this paper is to review the trends in electronic journal publication in Africa in relation to geographical representation, subject spread and language of publication and number of open access journals. The approach adopted for this study was to download the list of journals from the A...

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Main Author: Ifeanyi J. Ezema
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Webology Center 2010-06-01
Series:Webology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.webology.org/2010/v7n1/a74.html
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spelling doaj-ec47c62ceda54955994442c4d8f6f7682020-11-25T00:04:44ZengWebology CenterWebology1735-188X2010-06-0171a74Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)Ifeanyi J. EzemaThe purpose of this paper is to review the trends in electronic journal publication in Africa in relation to geographical representation, subject spread and language of publication and number of open access journals. The approach adopted for this study was to download the list of journals from the African Journal Online (AJOL) database. These journals were analyzed using tables and charts in relationship to the objectives of the study. This study shows that medical journals are more represented in the database than any other discipline and equally have more open access journals. More than ninety percent of the journals are published in English language while very few journals are published in African languages. Findings from the study reveal that there are very few African countries represented in the AJOL database. Only twenty-six African countries have their journals in the database with so many of them having not more than two journals. Nigeria and South Africa dominate the list of journals in the database. When African sub-region is considered West Africa contributes slightly more than half of all the other regions put together. Medical journals are more represented. In the present electronic environment, it is critical that African journal publishers respond to the need of publishing their scholarly outputs electronically to improve access and impact of their authors. The paper recommends that in order to enhance the visibility of African research outputs more journals publishers should be encouraged to join AJOL.http://www.webology.org/2010/v7n1/a74.htmlOpen access journalsAfrican journalsElectronic journalsElectronic publishingJournal publishingScholarly communicationPublicationsScientific productsBibliometricsAfrican Journal OnlineAfrica
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ifeanyi J. Ezema
spellingShingle Ifeanyi J. Ezema
Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)
Webology
Open access journals
African journals
Electronic journals
Electronic publishing
Journal publishing
Scholarly communication
Publications
Scientific products
Bibliometrics
African Journal Online
Africa
author_facet Ifeanyi J. Ezema
author_sort Ifeanyi J. Ezema
title Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)
title_short Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)
title_full Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)
title_fullStr Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)
title_full_unstemmed Trends in electronic journal publishing in Africa: an analysis of African Journal Online (AJOL)
title_sort trends in electronic journal publishing in africa: an analysis of african journal online (ajol)
publisher Webology Center
series Webology
issn 1735-188X
publishDate 2010-06-01
description The purpose of this paper is to review the trends in electronic journal publication in Africa in relation to geographical representation, subject spread and language of publication and number of open access journals. The approach adopted for this study was to download the list of journals from the African Journal Online (AJOL) database. These journals were analyzed using tables and charts in relationship to the objectives of the study. This study shows that medical journals are more represented in the database than any other discipline and equally have more open access journals. More than ninety percent of the journals are published in English language while very few journals are published in African languages. Findings from the study reveal that there are very few African countries represented in the AJOL database. Only twenty-six African countries have their journals in the database with so many of them having not more than two journals. Nigeria and South Africa dominate the list of journals in the database. When African sub-region is considered West Africa contributes slightly more than half of all the other regions put together. Medical journals are more represented. In the present electronic environment, it is critical that African journal publishers respond to the need of publishing their scholarly outputs electronically to improve access and impact of their authors. The paper recommends that in order to enhance the visibility of African research outputs more journals publishers should be encouraged to join AJOL.
topic Open access journals
African journals
Electronic journals
Electronic publishing
Journal publishing
Scholarly communication
Publications
Scientific products
Bibliometrics
African Journal Online
Africa
url http://www.webology.org/2010/v7n1/a74.html
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