Saturday, July 11, 2026

Who Is the Peer?


Peer review is presented as a central guarantee of academic quality, yet the peer often remains strangely abstract. Who is this person? What exactly did they read? From which intellectual position did they judge? What assumptions, loyalties, habits, or disciplinary limits shaped the evaluation? In many cases, the public sees only the final product: another article with the familiar structure, the expected references, the calibrated novelty, the modest contribution carefully positioned within an already established field. The issue is not that such articles are worthless. Many are excellent. The issue is that the system tends to reward a highly recognizable object. The format becomes increasingly uniform, the scale of acceptable novelty increasingly narrow. A new case, a refined variable, a slight methodological adjustment, another citation, another line on a curriculum vitae. Knowledge advances, but often through increments so controlled that the architecture of the field itself remains untouched. This is where the contemporary contrast becomes interesting. An open theoretical project may be larger, stranger, less standardized and more difficult to classify. It may develop across essays, concepts, archives, datasets, images, repositories and evolving versions. Its quality cannot be inferred from a journal title, but neither should it be dismissed for lacking one. It must be read. That may be the real difficulty. Institutional systems are highly efficient at recognizing familiar scholarly products. They are less efficient at recognizing forms of knowledge that do not yet resemble the objects through which recognition is normally distributed. Peer review is one procedure. It is not vision itself.