platform for growth. On the other, there is a persistent risk: that in our quest
for legitimacy, we might sacrifice the critical edge that questions, challenges,
and, ultimately, refines our practice. Our task is to traverse this delicate
balance, to harness the strengths of established academic support while never
losing sight of the need for uncompromising reflection. For John Stuart Mill,
“Truth gains more even by the errors of one who thinks for himself than by
the true opinions of those who only hold them because they do not suffer
themselves to think”. This maxim remains as relevant today as ever, urging
us to value independent, critical thought over the comfort of consensus. Yet,
the prevailing editorial practices in many prestigious journals have, over time,
undermined that very spirit. Investigative experiments – such as those
revealing fake peer review and superficial editorial scrutiny – have unmasked
a troubling reality: when editorial decisions are driven by profit and
influenced by superficial citation metrics, the moral fabric of academic
publishing begins to unravel. “The first principle is that you must not fool
yourself”, said Richard Feynman.
Our mission is not to offer ready-made answers but to open a space where
questions of accountability, responsibility, and integrity are brought to the
fore. We are here to probe those foundational assumptions that too often
escape examination, to interrogate the processes that shape our investigations,
and to foster a dialogue that is as incisive as it is respectful of the traditions
we inherit. The ethical dimensions of our work are not mere footnotes; they
are woven into the fabric of every inquiry and must be considered with the
same rigor as our empirical pursuits.
Consider for a moment the many ways in which our research, in its
unbridled pursuit of progress, can inadvertently reinforce imbalances of
power, marginalize dissenting voices, or obscure the very biases it seeks to
overcome. With these challenges in mind, we welcome contributions that
scrutinize the ethical undercurrents of social research—be they critical
analyses of prevailing methodologies, reflective essays that question our
assumptions, or incisive commentaries that propose new paths toward
responsible inquiry.
In this first quarterly volume just released, you will encounter a series of
essays, critiques, and commentaries that embody our commitment to this
rigorous examination. These pieces do not simply chronicle current practices;
they interrogate the values and ideals that guide them. They serve as both a