Double Anonymized & The Transparent Peer Review
Peer review, which refers to the review of manuscripts by field experts in the field before they are published, became a mainstream practice in the 20th century. Peer review is a necessary practice to evaluate the quality of scientific articles. Eskiyeni decided to publish the reviewer reports, and author responses to these reports, alongside the article to all readers in March 2022. This practice is known as “transparent peer review,” TPR for short. With the TPR, peer the reviewers' reports, the authors' responses, and the editors' decision letters are all published, alongside the article. The TPR implies greater accountability while less opportunity for review fraud, bias, or manipulation of results. As of March 2022, all reviewers were informed that their re-ports will be published alongside the article, without disclosing their identities. This practice will help promote transparency in the peer review process. Thus, the author and readers will be able to see the evaluation process the article went through until it was published. In addition, this practice will inform researchers planning to publish an article for the first time about how the refereeing process works. Eskiyeni operates a two-stage process in the review of submitted manuscripts: the Internal editorial review and the external review process. Immediately after submission, the editor checks the manuscript to check if it fits the journal's purpose and scope and adheres to principles of ethical research and writing standards. Afterward, the editor sends the manuscripts that complies with the journal's publication policy to the assistant editor for editorial review. At this stage, three internal reviewers take charge. The editor selects one of the assistant editors as the first internal reviewer. The assistant editor examines the manuscript for compliance with the journal writing rules and checks the manuscript for plagiarism through Turnitin. During this process, the reviewers' identity is visible to the author and vice versa. The assistant editor determines the other two internal re-viewers from the members of the editorial board based on their field of expertise. Internal reviewers evaluate the manuscript in terms of its subject, method, and results and decide whether it should be sent to external review for detailed evaluation. The external review is double-blind review; that is, the author and the reviewers do not know each other. The section editor selects two external reviewers among researchers who have carried out research on the manuscript’s topic. The reviewers evaluate the article in detail in terms of its subject, method, and results and write their recommendations about whether the paper should be published or not. If both reviewers' reports are positive, the study is accepted for publication with the decision of the editor. Manuscripts can be published with the positive decision of at least two reviewers. The editor rereads the manuscript accepted for publication. It is then submitted to the language editor for English editing. Finally, the peer reviewers’ reports, authors’ responses, and editors’ decision letters are all published, alongside the accepted articles. This process is fully compatible with journals using single or double anonymized review.
Eskiyeni operates a two-stage process in the review of submitted manuscripts: The Internal editorial review and The External review process. Detailed information about the review process used in the journal is given below:
Review Timing: Pre-publication
Number of Reviewers: Three Internal Reviewers (Editorial Review)- Two External Reviewers (Peer Review)
Mediation: Editors mediate all interactions between reviewers and authors
Reviewer interacts with: Editor
Number of days between submission & last decision: Average 70 Days/10 Weeks
Plagiarism checks: Yes – Turnitin
The Peer Review Process1. The Editor-in-Chief’s review: Immediately after submission, the Editor-in-Chief pre-checks the manuscript to comply with the journal's purpose, scope and adhere to ethical research and writing standards. Afterward, the Editor-in-Chief directs the manuscripts that comply with the journal's publication policy to the Assistant Editor for Editorial (Internal) Review.
2. The Editorial (Internal) Review Process: At this stage, three internal reviewers take charge.
Internal Reviewer 1 (Identity Transparency: All identities visible)
The Editor-in-Chief selects the first internal reviewer from the Assistant Editors. The assistant editor examines the manuscript for compliance with the journal writing rules and scans the article for plagiarism by Turnitin. Reviewer identity is visible to the author; author identity is visible to reviewer, reviewer and author identity is visible to (decision-making) editor.
Internal Reviewers 2 & 3 (Identity Transparency: Double Anonymized)
The Assistant Editor determines the two internal reviewers from the members of the Editorial Board according to their field of expertise. Internal reviewers evaluate the manuscript in terms of its subject, method, and results and decide whether it should be included in the external review process for detailed evaluation. Reviewer identity is not made visible to the author, author identity is not made visible to the reviewer, reviewer, and author identity is visible to (decision-making) editor.
3. The Peer Review (External Review) Process: Two external reviewers take charge at this stage.
External Reviewers 1 & 2 (Identity Transparency: Double Anonymized)
The Section Editor selects two external reviewers from the scholars who have done research on the manuscript topic. If the reviewer who has done research on the manuscript topic cannot be found, the reviewers are determined from among scholars who have a doctorate in that field of science. The reviewers evaluate the article in detail in terms of its subject, method, and results and express their opinions on whether the paper should be published or not. If both reviewers' reports are positive, the study is accepted for publication with the decision of the Editor-in-Chief. If one of the two reviewers has a negative opinion, the study is sent to a third reviewer. Manuscripts can be published with the favorable decision of at least two reviewers. Reviewer identity is not made visible to the author; author identity is not made visible to the reviewer; reviewer and au-thor identity are visible to (decision-making) editor.
Manuscript Preparation for Publication: The Editor-in-Chief rereads the manuscript accepted for publication. It is then submitted to the Language Editor for English Editing. The author is requested to revise the text in line with the demands of the Editor-in-Chief and Language Editor. The revised text is sent to the typesetting by the Editor-in-Chief. The Editor-in-Chief plans the issue in which the typed manuscript will be published.
The Review Reports' Publication (Transparent Peer Review): Peer reviews are published but not signed. https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/eskiyeni/page/13397
Post-publication Commenting: Published articles are promoted on social media platforms, and comments made by platform users are followed.
Ethical Violation Complaints: Ethical complaints regarding the published articles are followed via the eskiyenidergi@gmail.com e-mail account.
Peer Review Reports: Issue 46 (March 2022)
An Evaluation on the Situation of Scientific Publishing in Universities in Quality Processes | Rifat Türkel
Orientalists’ Perception of Māturīdism: The Case of Ulrich Rudolph and Angelika Brodersen | Mehmet Akif Ceyhan
From Nidā to Taqiyya: The Practice of Nidā and Taqiyya in the Nusayrī-Alevī Belief | Reyhan Erdoğdu Başaran
The Influence of the Belief in God in Shintoism on Japanese Social Life | Halil İbrahim Şenavcu
Three Matters of the Nature of Value: Power, Will and Action | Emrullah Kılıç
On Emanation and the Order of the Hypostasis System in the Philosophy of Plotinus | Hüseyin Aydoğan
Critique of The Criticism: Ḥusām Çelebi’s Criticism of Khaṭībzāde in the Context of The Definition of Knowledge | Mustafa Bilal Öztürk
Analysis of Ibn Kemal’s Wujūd Risâlesi (Booklet of Existence) with the Ottoman Translation Made by Ali Nihad Tarlan | tafa Salim Güven
Examining The Proofs of Wujūd-Wājib Identity in al-Muthul al-Aqliya al-Aflātūniyya | Muhammed Bedirhan
A Significant Person in the History of Music Theory: Allame Quṭb al-Dīn al-Shīrāzī | Sema Dinç - Ahmet Çakır
An Analysis of the Narrative Containing Curse: The Case of Caliph al-Mu‘tadid Bi’llāh | Mustafa Tanrıverdi
The Preservation of Divine Revelations with the Qur’ān as the Final Standard | Aslan Çıtır
The Interpretation of Basmala with the Content of the Surah: ‘Umar al-Nasafī and al-Biqāʿī Example | Ali Kaya
Expressing the Reward and Punishment of the Hereafter with Noun and Verb Sentences in the Qur’an | Bekir Yıldırım
Sufi Concepts in the Works Attributed to and Mentioning Shaykh Hāmid-i Wali (Somuncu Baba) | Mahmut Ulu
Peer Review Reports: Issue 47 (September 2022)
An Analysis of the Problem of Academic Structuring of Islamic Sciences Faculties in Turkey from the Darulfunun to the Present | Muhammet Mustafa Bayraktar
Empathy and Spirituality as Predictors of Altruism: A Quantitative Study on Theology Faculty Students | Ömer Faruk Söylev
Could Immanuel Kant be a Utilitarian? Kant’s Criticisms of Empiricist Moral Theories | Fatıma Güner - Hümeyra Özturan
Lost Paradise: Utopia or Reality? From Fall to Resurrection A Question of Civilization in Sezai Karakoç | Emrullah Kılıç
An Educational Analysis of Mohammed Abed Al-Jabri’s Theory of Three Knowledge Systems | Fatih İpek
The Legitimacy of Sufism and the Possibility of Esoterical Knowledge According to Ashāb al-hadīth and Salafis | Kadir Eser
The Scientific Justification of Revelation | İsmail Bulut
The Formation, Systematics, and Differences of the Ibāḍiyya | Sadi Ölmez
An Attempt to Identify Some of the Terms Used in the Khārijite and Ibādīya Literature | Güven Ağırkaya
Is There a Way from Split-Brain Cases to the Trinity? | Aykut Alper Yılmaz
The Zagwe Dynasty in the Context of Their Lineage, Kingdoms, and Relations with the Church | Tolga Savaş Altınel
The Effect of Ottoman Law on the Afghan Law: In the Example of Panel and Civil Law | Mehterhan Furkani
The Meanings of the Preposition ‘Bal’ in the Qur’ān and the Problem of Its Translation into Turkish | Servet Demirbaş
Interventions in the Human Genome: Ethical Discussions-Jurisprudential (Fıqhi) Approachesby Ülfet Görgülü (Ankara: Turkish Diyanet Foundation Publishing, 2021), XII+210 pages, ISBN 978-625-7672-44-3 | Miyase Yavuz Altıntaş