Beyond Menace: Unveiling the Landscape of Predatory Journals in Sudan’s Pediatric Academic Community

Abstract

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References
[1] Agarwal, P., & Bhandari, B. The menace of predatory journals. Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences, 17(2), 279–283. https://knepublishing.com/index.php/SJMS/article/view/11461 https://doi.org/10.18502/sjms.v17i2.11461

[2] Machacek, V., & Srholec, M. (2019). Predatory publications in Scopus: Evidence on cross-country differences (Working Papers IES). https://ideas.repec.org/p/fau/wpaper/wp2019_20.html

[3] Grudniewicz, A., Moher, D., Cobey, K. D., Bryson, G. L., Cukier, S., Allen, K., Ardern, C., Balcom, L., Barros, T., Berger, M, Buitrago Ciro, J., Cugusi, L., Donaldson, M. R., Egger, M., Graham, I. D., Hodgkinson, M., Khan, K. M., Mabizela, M., Manca, A., … Lalu, M. M. (2021). Predatory journals: No definition, no defense. Nature, 576(7786), 210–212. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03759-y https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-019-03759-y

[4] Paul, D. (2020, April 23). How predatory journals promote pseudoscience. Bad Science. https://badscience.in/predatory-journal/