The other day, Techdirt had a great post about the use of blogs in the world of academia. Specifically, it discussed how blogs can be a great method for academics to publish these papers.

For the most part, no one reads academic papers. The common person has to have either access to a full library, or at the very least a publication-specific search engine in order to even find them.

Blogs lower these barriers, and make academic papers much more accessible.

Any argument about a lack of review is invalid. Although it might be the wiki-fication of the academic world, publishing a paper on a blog will result in just as much peer review (if not more) by way of comments and link backs than publishing it in an academic journal.

Espen’s paper, published here a month or so ago, is just such proof of this. He has benefited a great deal from the various comments and e-mails he has received from readers. Although his Masters degree is now finished, he can still make use of these comments and what he has learned from them should he choose to write another paper on the same topic. Subsequent researchers will also be able to use not only Espen’s original paper, but the comments as well.

-Parker

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What’s the deal with this website?
You're reading BlogCampaigning. We write about public relations, social media, video games, marketing and pretty much whatever we feel is important. We've been around since August, 2006

Jens "Schredd" Schroeder has been around since the beginning, and he mostly writes about video games.

Heather Morrison is our newest recruit, and she also blogs about life in the big city at Toronto Uncovered.

All of the content on this site is cleaned up by Adam Gorley, our resident copy-editor. He does a hell of a job, and he also writes a few posts for us now and then. Not a lot of people know this, but he is also a soul music DJ who goes by the name "Night Danger."

Parker Mason is the self-described Editor-in-Chief of BlogCampaigning and runs the site with an iron fist. He's also a pretty great guy - you should meet him sometime.

Espen Skoland started this website a few years ago so that he could get extra marks for his thesis, but he's pretty much given up on contributing. Still, we often refer to him as The Legendary Founder. He might be lazy, but he left us with a legacy.