Do you have any specific evidence on the prestige factor? Double blind peer review would seem to argue against this but then again papers are often refused before reaching this stage as “not suitable for us”.
Well, clearly, I can’t give any anecdotal evidence with too much detail in public. I’ll just say that “prestige” is probably the most diplomatic term one might choose to use there.
Regarding double-blind review, it has always seemed to me as a farce. Any particular research community is a small world, so how can you possibly be competent to review a paper if you can’t guess who the author might be based on the content and the work it builds on? Then, of course, there are the editors, who know everything, whose discretion is large, and who can often drop hints to the reviewers one way or another.
Well, clearly, I can’t give any anecdotal evidence with too much detail in public. I’ll just say that “prestige” is probably the most diplomatic term one might choose to use there.
Regarding double-blind review, it has always seemed to me as a farce. Any particular research community is a small world, so how can you possibly be competent to review a paper if you can’t guess who the author might be based on the content and the work it builds on? Then, of course, there are the editors, who know everything, whose discretion is large, and who can often drop hints to the reviewers one way or another.