Our theory of change is shown above as a series of possible paths; we indicate what is arguably the most "direct" path in yellow. All of these paths begin with our setting up, funding, communicating, and incentivizing participation in a strong, open, efficient research evaluation system (in green, at the top). These processes all lead to impactful research being more in-depth, more reliable, more accessible, and more useful, and thus better informing decision-makers and leading to better decisions and outcomes (in green, at the bottom).
You can zoom in on #some-of-the-main-paths below
(Yellow) Faster and better feedback on impactful research improves this work and better informs policymakers and philanthropists.
(Blue) Our processes and incentives will foster ties between (a) mainstream and prominent academic and policy researchers and (b) global-priorities or EA-aligned researchers. This will improve the rigor, credibility, exposure, and influence of previously "EA niche" work while helping mainstream researchers better understand and incorporate ideas, principles, and methods from the EA and rationalist research communities (such as counterfactual impact, cause-neutrality, reasoning transparency, and so on.) This process will also nudge mainstream academics towards focusing on impact and global priorities, and towards making their research and outputs more accessible and useable.
(Pink) The Unjournal’s more efficient, open, and flexible processes will become attractive to academics and stakeholders. As we become better at "predicting publication outcomes," we will become a replacement for traditional processes, improving research overall—some of which will be highly impactful research.
Rigorous quantitative and empirical research in economics, business, public policy, and social science has the potential to improve our decision-making and enable a flourishing future. This can be seen in the research frameworks proposed by 80,000 Hours, Open Philanthropy, and The Global Priorities Institute (see discussions here). This research is routinely used by effective altruists working on global priorities or existential risk mitigation. It informs both philanthropic decisions (e.g., those influenced by GiveWell's Cost-Effectiveness Analyses, whose inputs are largely based on academic research) and national public policy. Unfortunately, the academic publication process is notoriously slow; for example, in economics, it routinely takes 2–6 years between the first presentation of a research paper and the eventual publication in a peer-reviewed journal. Recent reforms have sped up parts of the process by encouraging researchers to put working papers and preprints online.
However, working papers and preprints often receive at most only a cursory check before publication, and it is up to the reader to judge quality for themselves. Decision-makers and other researchers rely on peer review to judge the work’s credibility. This part remains slow and inefficient. Furthermore, it provides very noisy signals: A paper is typically judged by the "prestige of the journal it lands in"’ (perhaps after an intricate odyssey across journals), but it is hard to know why it ended up there. Publication success is seen to depend on personal connections, cleverness, strategic submission strategies, good presentation skills, and relevance to the discipline’s methods and theory. These factors are largely irrelevant to whether and how philanthropists and policymakers should consider and act on a paper’s claimed findings. Reviews are kept secret; the public never learns why a paper was deemed worthy of a journal, nor what its strengths and weaknesses were.
We believe that disseminating research sooner—along with measures of its credibility—is better.
We also believe that publicly evaluating its quality before (and in addition to) journal publication will add substantial additional value to the research output, providing:
a quality assessment (by experts in the field) that can decisionmakers and other researchers can read alongside the preprint, helping these users weigh its strengths and weaknesses and interpret its implications; and
faster feedback to authors focused on improving the rigor and impact of the work.
Various initiatives in the life sciences have already begun reviewing preprints. While economics took the lead in sharing working papers, public evaluation of economics, business, and social science research is rare. The Unjournal is the first initiative to publicly evaluate rapidly-disseminated work from these fields. Our specific priority: research relevant to global priorities.
The Unjournal’s open feedback should also be valuable to the researchers themselves and their research community, catalyzing progress. As the Unjournal Evaluation becomes a valuable outcome in itself, researchers can spend less time "gaming the journal system." Shared public evaluation will provide an important window to other researchers, helping them better understand the relevant cutting-edge concerns. The Unjournal will permit research to be submitted in a wider variety of useful formats (e.g., dynamic documents and notebooks rather than "frozen pdfs"), enabling more useful, replicable content and less time spent formatting papers for particular journals. We will also allow researchers to improve their work in situ and gain updated evaluations, rather than having to spin off new papers. This will make the literature more clear and less cluttered.
We acknowledge the potential for "information hazards" when research methods, tools, and results become more accessible. This is of particular concern in the context of direct physical and biological science research, particularly in biosecurity (although there is a case that specific open science practices may be beneficial). ML/AI research may also fall into this category. Despite these potential risks, we believe that the fields we plan to cover—detailed above—do not primarily present such concerns.
In cases where our model might be extended to high-risk research—such as new methodologies contributing to terrorism, biological warfare, or uncontrolled AI—the issue of accessibility becomes more complex. We recognize that increasing accessibility in these areas might potentially pose risks.
While we don't expect these concerns to be raised frequently about The Unjournal's activities, we remain committed to supporting thoughtful discussions and risk assessments around these issues.