<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title>Episciences.org TEI export of elpub:4635 - ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing, 2018-06-22, Connecting the Knowledge Commons: From Projects to Sustainable Infrastructure</title></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>CCSD - Episciences</distributor><availability status="restricted"><licence target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0">Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)</licence></availability><date when="2018-06-22"/></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><p>Episciences.org API platform</p></sourceDesc></fileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><listBibl><biblFull><titleStmt><title xml:lang="en">Spatial Reference Patterns as a Point of Hegemonic Struggle: A Case Study of Biotechnology Journals in Latin America</title><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">Bárbara</forename><surname>Rivera-López</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-0"/></author><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">Manuel</forename><surname>Luci</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-1"/></author></titleStmt><editionStmt><edition><date type="whenSubmitted">2018-06-22 19:36:19</date><date type="whenProduced">2018-06-22 19:40:26</date><ref type="file" target="http://elpub.episciences.org/4635/pdf"/></edition><respStmt><resp>contributor</resp><name key="630180"><persName><forename>OpenEdition</forename><surname>Press</surname></persName><email>press@openedition.org</email></name></respStmt></editionStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>CCSD</distributor><idno type="id">elpub:4635</idno><idno type="url">http://elpub.episciences.org/4635</idno><idno type="ref">elpub:4635 - ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing, 2018-06-22, Connecting the Knowledge Commons: From Projects to Sustainable Infrastructure</idno><licence target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0">Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)</licence></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><biblStruct><analytic><title xml:lang="en">Spatial Reference Patterns as a Point of Hegemonic Struggle: A Case Study of Biotechnology Journals in Latin America</title><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">Bárbara</forename><surname>Rivera-López</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-0"/></author><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">Manuel</forename><surname>Luci</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-1"/></author></analytic><monogr><idno type="HAL">hal-01816799</idno><title level="j">ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing</title><imprint><publisher/><biblScope unit="volume">Connecting the Knowledge Commons: From Projects to Sustainable Infrastructure</biblScope><biblScope unit="issue">Poster Abstracts</biblScope><date type="datePub">2018-06-22T19:40:26+02:00</date></imprint></monogr><idno type="doi">10.4000/proceedings.elpub.2018.5</idno></biblStruct></sourceDesc><profileDesc><langUsage><language ident="en">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="author"><term>Latin America</term><term>English as a lingua franca</term><term>geopolitics of knowledge</term><term>[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences</term></keywords></textClass><abstract><p>International audience</p></abstract><abstract xml:lang="en"><p>Anglophone hegemony in knowledge production processes has been long acknowledged. Academic capitalism (Slaughter and Leslie, 2004) and its neoliberal rationalities, the dominant narratives within the colonial ventures, and a dominant and unreflective use of English in the production of textual knowledge have produced uneven structures in the academic publishing space, a homogenization of the concept of ‘international’ (Paasi 2005, 2015; Tietze and Dick, 2013; Péloquin, 2017). The contribution of the present research to this debate is the identification of points of hegemonic disruption in Latin America. We performed a case study on six articles written in Spanish and Portuguese of two Latin American Biotechnology journals with the purpose of identifying their spatial reference pattern. Findings show a high use of references in Spanish and Portuguese (54,31% and 36.49%, respectively. We interpret complex linguistic referencing patterns - this is citing in languages other than English - as an environment that opens meanings and enriches discussion. Moreover, we conceive Latin America as a space of hegemonic struggle against English homogenization in Science, and the SciELO platform as the infrastructure with the potential to (hopefully) transform the current academic status quo.</p></abstract></profileDesc></biblFull></listBibl></body><back><listOrg><org xml:id="struct-0"><orgName>Universidad Mayor</orgName></org><org xml:id="struct-1"><idno type="ROR">https://ror.org/047gc3g35</idno><orgName>Universidad de Chile = University of Chile [Santiago]</orgName></org></listOrg></back></text></TEI>