Policy Development and the SCOPUS Citation System: Part 5: the work of the Content Selection Advisory Board 2022 – 2024
Policy Development and the SCOPUS Citation System: Part 5: the work of the Content Selection Advisory Board 2022 – 2024
SCOPUS occupies a central role in the global ecosystem of academic publication. It is a key component of a proprietary information system which has been developed by Elsevier BV for the provision of bibliometric information on the performance of authors, journals, books, publishers, faculties and institutions to Universities, Corporations and Governments around the world. It functions in respectful competition with the Web of Science, which is owned by Clarivate Analytics. The Scopus Content Selection Advisory Board (CSAB) of independent members has a significant advisory role in quality assurance and policy development around the SCOPUS system, and in debating future technical developments.
In this series of essays on the Art and Science of Academic Journal Editing and Publishing, I am seeking to create a durable record of the events and discussions of the SCOPUS CSAB from my own records, research, and perspectives as an active member of the Board since 2009, for future reference and for the further education of publishing professionals.
In previous essays in this series, I have described the creation and early years of SCOPUS and the SCOPUS Title Evaluation Process (STEP) from 2003; the creation of the current SCOPUS Content Selection Advisory Board (CSAB) in 2009; and the evolution of policy for SCOPUS, STEP and the CSAB through 2010-2011; 2012-2016; 2017-2019; and 2020-2021. I have also separately described the technical evolution of SCOPUS itself, and of the Title Evaluation Platform.
In this essay, I describe the policy work of the Board over the period 2022 to 2024. This saw the continued expansion and diversification of SCOPUS content and collaborations with national research collections using the new Research Data Platform. The global arrival of Generative AI in late 2022 prompted the introduction and development of SCOPUS AI.
I also discuss the maturation of organisational and technical systems to counter the global explosion of sophisticated publication fraud; the further development of SCOPUS Radar; the retraction of articles; the challenges of identical and near-identical journal titles; and the challenges of evaluating faith-based journals.
SCOPUS, Content Selection Advisory Board, Bibliometrics, Web of Science, Publishing Ethics, Publication Malpractice, SCOPUS Radar, SCOPUS AI, Elsevier Research Data Platform, JStage, Hijacked journals, Machine Translation, Research Integrity
University of Southampton
Rew, David
36dcc3ad-2379-4b61-a468-5c623d796887
2 March 2026
Rew, David
36dcc3ad-2379-4b61-a468-5c623d796887
Rew, David
(2026)
Policy Development and the SCOPUS Citation System: Part 5: the work of the Content Selection Advisory Board 2022 – 2024
(Essays in the Art and Science of Academic Journal Editing and Publishing)
University of Southampton
51pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
SCOPUS occupies a central role in the global ecosystem of academic publication. It is a key component of a proprietary information system which has been developed by Elsevier BV for the provision of bibliometric information on the performance of authors, journals, books, publishers, faculties and institutions to Universities, Corporations and Governments around the world. It functions in respectful competition with the Web of Science, which is owned by Clarivate Analytics. The Scopus Content Selection Advisory Board (CSAB) of independent members has a significant advisory role in quality assurance and policy development around the SCOPUS system, and in debating future technical developments.
In this series of essays on the Art and Science of Academic Journal Editing and Publishing, I am seeking to create a durable record of the events and discussions of the SCOPUS CSAB from my own records, research, and perspectives as an active member of the Board since 2009, for future reference and for the further education of publishing professionals.
In previous essays in this series, I have described the creation and early years of SCOPUS and the SCOPUS Title Evaluation Process (STEP) from 2003; the creation of the current SCOPUS Content Selection Advisory Board (CSAB) in 2009; and the evolution of policy for SCOPUS, STEP and the CSAB through 2010-2011; 2012-2016; 2017-2019; and 2020-2021. I have also separately described the technical evolution of SCOPUS itself, and of the Title Evaluation Platform.
In this essay, I describe the policy work of the Board over the period 2022 to 2024. This saw the continued expansion and diversification of SCOPUS content and collaborations with national research collections using the new Research Data Platform. The global arrival of Generative AI in late 2022 prompted the introduction and development of SCOPUS AI.
I also discuss the maturation of organisational and technical systems to counter the global explosion of sophisticated publication fraud; the further development of SCOPUS Radar; the retraction of articles; the challenges of identical and near-identical journal titles; and the challenges of evaluating faith-based journals.
Text
Working paper by David Rew SCOPUS CSAB Policies Part 5 2022 - 2024 02.03.2026
- Author's Original
More information
Published date: 2 March 2026
Additional Information:
David Rew, MA MB MChir (Cambridge) FRCS (London)
Honorary Consultant Surgeon to the Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, UK And to the Clinical Informatics Research Unit.
Former Editor in Chief of the EJSO, The European Journal of Surgical Oncology, 2003-2009.
Subject Chair for Medicine to the SCOPUS Content Selection Advisory Board, Elsevier BV,
The Netherlands, 2009 to the Present.
Keywords:
SCOPUS, Content Selection Advisory Board, Bibliometrics, Web of Science, Publishing Ethics, Publication Malpractice, SCOPUS Radar, SCOPUS AI, Elsevier Research Data Platform, JStage, Hijacked journals, Machine Translation, Research Integrity
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509795
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509795
PURE UUID: 2a7fa319-692f-4ff0-9616-f5c2a597e76d
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Date deposited: 05 Mar 2026 23:01
Last modified: 07 Mar 2026 04:00
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