Shifting Paradigms in Research Communication
Academic publishing is undergoing a significant transformation as scholar-led initiatives and the Publish-Review-Curate (PRC) model attract increasing attention from researchers, funders, and institutions worldwide. These approaches prioritize rapid dissemination, transparency, and community governance over traditional journal gatekeeping. In 2025 and 2026, forums, policy shifts, and new platforms have accelerated adoption, positioning PRC as a practical response to longstanding critiques of delay, cost, and opacity in scholarly communication.
Defining Scholar-Led Publishing and the PRC Framework
Scholar-led publishing refers to journals, platforms, and services initiated and governed primarily by academic communities rather than commercial entities. These often operate under diamond open access principles, where neither authors nor readers pay fees. The PRC model builds on this by separating three distinct phases that traditionally occur together in a single journal process.
Publish involves posting research as a preprint on a public server with minimal barriers, allowing immediate sharing and feedback. Review brings in open peer review, where evaluations are public and often iterative. Curate adds selective organization, with communities or services highlighting high-quality or relevant works in collections or overlay journals. Each step can occur independently, on different platforms, and multiple times.
This structure contrasts with conventional models where submission, review, and publication happen sequentially behind closed doors, often taking months or years. PRC leverages preprint servers like arXiv and bioRxiv alongside review platforms to speed up knowledge exchange while maintaining rigorous evaluation.
Key Examples Driving Adoption
Several established and emerging entities illustrate PRC in practice. eLife shifted to a model where authors submit preprints for review, resulting in public Reviewed Preprints accompanied by editorial assessments. Funders increasingly accept these for evaluation purposes. Biophysics Colab adopted a similar full PRC service, emphasizing community input.
Peer Community Journal and F1000Research represent born-PRC approaches, while MetaROR launched a pilot focused on metaresearch. Open Research Europe, supported by the European Commission, provides a PRC option for funded researchers. These cases demonstrate how PRC accommodates diverse disciplines and scales.
Connections to Diamond Open Access
Scholar-led publishing frequently aligns with diamond open access, emphasizing nonprofit, community-owned infrastructure. A major U.S. mapping project launched in late 2025 by Lyrasis, the Big Ten Academic Alliance, and the California Digital Library aims to document the landscape of such journals through 2027, funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The effort seeks to identify sustainability challenges and recommend support structures.
Global declarations, including the 2024 Toluca-Cape Town Declaration, reinforce diamond models as public goods driven by equity and inclusivity. European initiatives like DIAMAS further explore institutional support for these non-commercial pathways.
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Recent Momentum in 2025 and 2026
Public forums have highlighted PRC potential. A December 2025 ASAPbio event gathered stakeholders to discuss implementation outcomes. In January 2026, a COAR-led initiative established publish-review-curate.org as a hub for related projects. The ALMASI project scheduled its second discussion series for June 2026, focusing on community-driven models across Europe, Latin America, and Africa, with emphasis on preprints, open peer review, and curation within diamond frameworks.
Funder actions add weight. The Gates Foundation refreshed its open access policy to favor PRC-friendly approaches and provided multi-year support to PREreview for equitable review practices. The Howard Hughes Medical Institute now covers fees for PRC publications to ease author participation.
Benefits for Researchers and the Broader Community
PRC accelerates sharing, enabling earlier citations and collaborations. Transparency in reviews fosters accountability and reduces hidden biases. Authors retain control over timing and can iterate based on public feedback. Curation services help surface valuable work amid growing preprint volumes without creating new paywalls.
Equity improves as costs shift away from individual authors toward institutional or funder support. Smaller research communities gain visibility through scholar-led platforms. Reproducibility benefits from linked data and open discussions.
Challenges and Practical Considerations
Sustainability remains a core issue. Many scholar-led efforts rely on volunteer labor, which can strain editorial teams over time. Recognition in promotion and tenure processes lags, though funder acceptance of reviewed preprints helps. Infrastructure needs, including interoperable platforms and quality standards, require ongoing investment.
Some journals transitioning to diamond models have reported difficulties replacing subscription revenue, underscoring the need for diversified funding like grants or consortia support. Scalability across disciplines varies, with life sciences leading adoption while humanities explore adaptations.
Perspectives from Stakeholders
Researchers appreciate faster feedback and broader reach. Early-career scholars benefit from visible contributions via preprints and public reviews. Funders see alignment with open science mandates and potential cost savings. Institutions explore how PRC integrates with repository services and research assessment reforms.
Traditional publishers monitor developments, with some experimenting with hybrid offerings. Community organizations emphasize governance models that keep control in academic hands.
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Implications for Academic Careers and Research Assessment
PRC influences how output is evaluated. Reviewed preprints with assessments provide citable records that funders and some institutions now consider alongside journal articles. This shift encourages focus on research quality over venue prestige.
For job seekers and tenure-track faculty, engaging with PRC platforms can demonstrate commitment to open practices. Training in preprint posting, open review participation, and curation awareness becomes valuable professional development.
Future Outlook and Pathways Forward
Continued policy support and infrastructure development point to wider PRC integration by 2027-2030. AI tools may assist with review matching and curation, while community networks expand globally. Coordinated efforts around standards and funding will determine long-term viability.
Academics can explore participation through existing platforms, advocate for institutional recognition, and contribute to governance of scholar-led initiatives. These models offer constructive alternatives that address systemic pressures while preserving rigorous scholarship.
One related exploration of diamond open access and scholar-led models appears in prior coverage on this site.
Learn more about diamond open access and scholar-led publishing models.