The Market of Academic Texts in Russia (according to a qualitative survey)

The Market of Academic Texts in Russia (according to a qualitative survey)


Chepurenko A. Yu.

Dr. Sci. (Econ.), Professor, HSE University, Moscow, Russia. achepurenko@hse.ru

Chernysheva M.V.

Cand. Sci. (Sociol.), Assistant Professor, HSE University, Moscow, Russia. mchernysheva@hse.ru

ID of the Article:


For citation:

Chepurenko A. Yu., Chernysheva M.V. The Market of Academic Texts in Russia (according to a qualitative survey). Sotsiologicheskie issledovaniya [Sociological Studies]. 2024. No 3. P. 44-56



Abstract

In Russia, there exists a market where academic texts are sold and bought, from student qualification papers to scientific articles and dissertations. Although its existence violates the formal norms and values of the scientific community, it functions sustainably. The authors analyze the established practices of writing academic texts on demand (with an emphasis on the study of the social behavior of actors) as part of a specific organizational field, a kind of market. The study is based on semi-structured interviews with six direct actors, so-called scriptors (or ghostwriters) and four experts representing NGOs in the field of science and higher education. Destructive entrepreneurship in the system of higher education and science is characterized as a complex system, the actors of which are not only informally “self-employed” scriptors, but also formal organizations that provide contact between customers and performers of academic work. The stability of quasiscientific texts market in Russia is associated at the macro level with the high demand for higher education and scientific degrees as a status attribute, as well as with a significant supply from scientific and pedagogical workers, thus compensating for the limited opportunities for legal academic entrepreneurship by informal destructive entrepreneurship. At the meso level, the institutional conditions are the rigidity of Russian universities, which continue to be primarily educational institutions, where legal academic entrepreneurship of an innovative type is developing very modestly, and low salaries of staff members. At the micro level, it is an attempt to impose publication activity as the main criterion of academic success in conditions where a significant part of university staff perceive themselves as teachers, not researchers, and do not seek (or do not have the opportunity) to change this situation.


Keywords
market of academic texts; scientific institutions; system of higher education; informal economic activity; destructive entrepreneurship; Russia

References

Balatsky E.V. (2008) Formation of the “dissertation trap”. Ekonomika obrazovaniya [Economics of education]. No. 4: 149–160. (In Russ.)

Baumol W. (1990) Entrepreneurship: Productive, Unproductive, and Destructive. Journal of Political Economy. Vol. 98. No. 5: 893–921.

Brumshteyn Y.M., Snezhinskaya E.Y. (2018) The Russian market of custom theses in the conditions of information and telecommunication technologies development. Vestnik Evrazijskoj nauki [The Eurasian Scientific Journal]. Vol. 10. No.1: 1–21. (In Russ.)

Chepurenko A., Butryumova N., Chernysheva M., Sutormina А. (2023) Entrepreneurship in and around academia: evidence from Russia. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy. Vol. 29: 577–581.

Davydov A., Abramov P. (2021) The Ethnography of the Bullshit. Who and how is writing paid educational papers in Russia. Moscow: Common Place. (In Russ.)

Gorlanov G.V. (2013) Preconditions of the formation and expanded reproduction of the shadow market of dissertation services. Gosudarstvennaya sluzhba [Public service]. No. 3(83): 80–83. (In Russ.)

Henning M.A., Chen Y., Ram S., Malpas P. (2019) Describing the attributional nature of academic dishonesty. Medical Science Educator. Vol. 29: 577–581.

Högberg L., Mitchell C. (2022) Mixed embeddedness and entrepreneurship beyond new venture creation: Opportunity tensions in the case of reregulated public markets. International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship. Vol. 41. No. 2: 121–151.

Kalimullin T.R. (2005) The Russian market of dissertation services (beginning). Ekonomicheskaya soziologiya [Economic sociology]. Vol. 6. No. 4: 14–38. (In Russ.)

Kalimullin T.R. (2011) The Russian market of dissertation services. Ekonomika obrazovaniya [Economics of education]. No. 1: 106–124. (In Russ.)

Kalimullin T.R. (2013) The Russian market of dissertation services. Ekonomika obrazovaniya [Economics of education]. No. 2: 119–144. (In Russ.)

Knapp J.C., Hulbert A.M. (2017) Academic dishonesty. In: Ghostwriting and the ethics of authenticity. New York: Palgrave Macmillan: 85–105.

Padillah R. (2023) Ghostwriting: a reflection of academic dishonesty in the artificial intelligence era. Journal of Public Health. No. 1. P. e193-e194.

Svirina A., Anand A. (2022) Dubious or decisive? Digging deeper into the unchartered path of academic ghostwriting. Journal of Organizational Change Management. Vol. 35. No. 1: 38–58.

Welter F. (2011) Contextualizing entrepreneurship – conceptual challenges and ways forward. Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice. Vol. 35. No.1: 165–184.

Yurasov I.A., Tanina M.A., Yudina V.A., Kuznetsova E.V. (2021) Informal Academic Entrepreneurship: Current State and Development Trends. Vestnik Kemerovskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Seriia: Politicheskie, sotsiologicheskie i ekono-micheskie nauki [Bulletin of Kemerovo State University. Series: Political, Sociological and Economic Sciences]. Vol. 6. No. 3: 347–356. (In Russ.)

Zahra S.A., Wright M., Abdelgawad S.G. (2014) Contextualization and the advancement of entrepreneurship research. International Small Business Journal. Vol. 32. No. 5: 479–500.

Content No 3, 2024