How to identify scholarly, trade and popular publications
Scholarly Journals | Substantive/Trade or Professional Publications | Popular/General interest magazines | |
---|---|---|---|
Sample titles | e.g. Canadian Journal of Economics, Journal of Chemical Biology | e.g. Economist, Advertising Age | e.g. Maclean's, Time |
Author | Written by scholars, often affiliated with a university or institution. | Practitioners in a particular field. Scholar, free lance writer or staff. | Magazine staff or free lance writer. Sometimes an expert or scholar. |
Purpose/Audience | To make available original research or critical analysis to the scholarly world. | To provide practical information to people in the field. To inform an educated audience. | To provide information to the general public on a wide range of topics. |
Language/Tone | Unemotional, factual, scientific. Formal style. | Trade publications use language of a particular field, written for the educated professional. Substantive publications written for an educated public. | Informal language. Easy reading. May be anecdotal or personal. |
Publisher | Often published by a professional organization or university press; sometimes published by commercial enterprises for profit. | Professional organization affiliated to a particular field. | Published by commercial enterprises for profit. |
Validation | Footnotes and bibliographies always included. | Sources of information sometimes mentioned within the article. Bibliographies rarely included. | Sources rarely cited. |
Review Process | Articles go through peer review by other experts in the field. | Minimal review by editorial staff. | Minimal review by editorial staff. |
Layout | May contain graphs, charts, photos included only to support text. | Charts, graphs,photos relevant to article. May include graphic art. | Photos and illustrations used as decorations. Includes advertising which targets the general public. |