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How to get more UN SDG research into your journal: Strategies for Global Impact

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The Source
By: Guest contributor, Tue Jul 4 2023

By Nicola Jones, Director, PÕ¾ÊÓƵ SDG Programme

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Author: Guest contributor

As academic journal publishers and editors, it's not only our duty but also our responsibility to publish research articles that align with current global priorities and issues. The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) provide a comprehensive framework for tackling the world's most pressing social, economic, and environmental challenges by 2030. By definition, these complex challenges need interdisciplinary approaches. And because of its broad societal relevance, this research also engages policymakers, industry leaders, and other stakeholders; and can give the journals publishing it broader impact and visibility.

How to encourage more SDG research in your journal

That¡¯s the why of publishing more SDG-related research. Perhaps the more difficult question is: How.

That question was the topic of a recent Council of Science Editors (CSE) 2023 conference panel, featuring Nicola Jones of PÕ¾ÊÓƵ, James Butcher of Clarke & Esposito (a publishing consulting firm), Fiona Miller who is a Professor of Health Policy at the University of Toronto, and Liam Messin of The Lancet Global Health. These panelists ¡ª from a range of roles across research ¡ª focused in on both ideas journal editors can use, and pitfalls to avoid.

Publish SDG research that fits your audience and your journal

Maybe the most important point is: Keep your journal¡¯s existing audience and scope in mind. Don¡¯t try to shoe-horn in research that doesn¡¯t organically fit what your journal does well. Instead, seek out research relevant to one or more of the SDGs that fits your journal.

Also, keep in mind the issues of diversity, equity and inclusion, you should be aware of the volume of research in the SDGs coming from geographic regions beyond Western Europe and North America. So you can ¡ª and should ¡ª seek out and invite contributors (and reviewers) from these regions, rather than relying on submissions already coming to you.

Special issues and multi-journal collections

Some journal editors have had success with special issues and with multi-journal collections. These approaches recruit guest editors to find, solicit, and curate research focused on particular SDGs (or parts thereof) consistent with what your journal already does (see the first point, above). Notably, this suggestion came out of the Q&A session after the main panel, and the panelists engaging with it noted that these approaches can be a great way to send a clear signal about what your journal is interested in; and the multi-journal collaborations provide a way to connect with both the SDGs, and a core disciplinary audience.

And as always, collaboration, leadership, and authenticity are essential to making progress towards a sustainable future.

A closing thought

Panelist Fiona Miller put it really well when she opened the panel. She said that, when it comes to sustainability, it doesn¡¯t matter who leads, because as long as we get there, all benefit. And many of those attending the panel noted afterwards that the panel itself inspired them to more direct action to support the SDGs.

Learn more about everything PÕ¾ÊÓƵ is doing to lead in and support publishing research in the SDGs.


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About the author

Nicola Jones ? springernature 2023
Nicola is responsible for coordinating the publishing activity across PÕ¾ÊÓƵ where it relates to the UN SDGs, with the aim of bringing research that has the potential to help achieve the Goals to the attention of those best placed to implement it. In order to do this, she works with the editors and publishers across PÕ¾ÊÓƵ¡¯s journals, books and other products and across all relevant disciplines to ensure that the approach is joined up, information is shared across departments and that all relevant colleagues are engaged with the programme. Nicola is passionate about the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration for solving complex global problems, and the need for solid research evidence to inform policy and practice.

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Author: Guest contributor

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