The Rise of Paper Mills in Scholarly Publishing
Academic publishing faces an escalating challenge from paper mills, commercial operations that produce and sell fabricated or manipulated research manuscripts. These entities exploit the intense pressure on researchers to publish frequently, often in high-impact journals, to advance careers, secure funding, or meet institutional metrics. Paper mills typically offer ready-made papers or authorship slots for a fee, undermining the foundational principles of scientific inquiry and peer review.
Unlike traditional research misconduct by individual scholars, paper mills operate at industrial scale. They generate thousands of submissions annually, frequently targeting fields like biomedicine, engineering, and chemistry where publication volume directly influences rankings and resources. This phenomenon has accelerated in recent years, coinciding with the expansion of open-access models and the proliferation of special issues in journals.
Defining Paper Mills and Their Operations
A paper mill, according to the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), refers to an entity that manufactures manuscripts for submission to journals in exchange for payment, either to provide easy publication or to sell authorship positions. These operations often involve networks of writers, data fabricators, and brokers who coordinate submissions across multiple journals simultaneously.
Common tactics include the use of tortured phrases—awkward or nonsensical wording generated to evade plagiarism detectors—along with fabricated data, manipulated images, and citation cartels where papers reference each other to inflate metrics. Mills frequently target early-career researchers or those in regions with strong publish-or-perish cultures, offering packages that include guaranteed acceptance in certain journals.
The process typically begins with solicitation via email or online advertisements. Customers pay fees ranging from hundreds to thousands of dollars depending on the journal's prestige and the author's position in the byline. Once accepted, the paper enters the literature, potentially influencing future research, clinical decisions, or policy.
Scale and Statistical Evidence of the Problem
Estimates of paper mill activity vary but point to a substantial and growing issue. A 2022 COPE and STM Association study found that suspected paper mill submissions ranged from 2% to 46% across analyzed journals, with most experiencing at least 2%. In biomedicine, the problem appears more acute.
A 2026 analysis using machine learning estimated that approximately 10% of recently published cancer research literature may originate from paper mills, with figures rising to 20-22% for liver, gastric, and bone cancer studies. The number of suspect papers has grown exponentially since 2000. China accounts for the highest proportion of flagged output at 36%, followed by Iran at 20%, Saudi Arabia at 16%, Egypt at 15%, and Pakistan and Malaysia at 13% each.
Retraction data underscores the scale. Hindawi journals alone retracted more than 8,000 articles linked to suspected paper mill activity. Publishers report that suspect submissions have doubled roughly every 18 months in some areas, overwhelming traditional detection methods.
Notable Scandals and Journal Responses
Several high-profile cases have highlighted vulnerabilities in the system. In 2023-2024, Wiley's Hindawi division faced massive retractions after investigations revealed systematic manipulation in special issues. This led to the closure of 19 journals and significant reputational damage.
Other publishers have reported similar patterns, with fake peer reviewers infiltrating editorial systems and coordinated submissions flooding particular topics. A Nature investigation detailed how paper mill cancer studies often receive double the citations of genuine papers, partly due to self-citation networks that artificially boost journal impact factors.
These scandals have prompted broader scrutiny. The 2025 Publication Research Congress (PRC) dedicated sessions to fraud, paper mills, and peer review integrity, where delegates discussed infiltration by fake reviewers and the challenges of scaling detection efforts.
Photo by Andre William on Unsplash
Impact on Research Integrity, Careers, and Public Trust
The infiltration of fraudulent papers erodes trust in the scientific record. Researchers relying on the literature for meta-analyses or systematic reviews may unknowingly incorporate flawed data, leading to misguided conclusions in fields like medicine and public health.
For academics, the issue creates a double bind. Genuine researchers face heightened scrutiny and longer review times as journals implement stricter checks, while those who have used mills risk exposure and career-ending retractions. Early-career scholars and those from underrepresented institutions often feel the pressure most acutely, as publication counts remain central to hiring, tenure, and promotion decisions.
Broader societal implications include wasted research funding, delayed scientific progress, and potential harm when fraudulent findings influence clinical practice or policy. The problem also disadvantages honest researchers competing for limited spots in top journals.
The Role of Artificial Intelligence in Amplifying the Threat
Generative AI tools have lowered barriers for paper mills, enabling faster production of plausible-looking manuscripts with fabricated data and images. While AI can assist legitimate research, its misuse facilitates the creation of content that evades traditional plagiarism checks and even some forensic tools.
Experts note that mills increasingly use AI to generate variations of the same core paper, swapping author names, institutions, and details to target different journals. This evolution makes detection more difficult and underscores the need for advanced, multi-layered screening approaches.
Publisher and Industry Responses: Tools and Collaboration
In response, the scholarly publishing community has developed coordinated initiatives. The STM Integrity Hub, launched by the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers, provides a cloud-based platform for screening submissions against paper mill indicators. It screens over 125,000 manuscripts monthly across participating publishers, flagging approximately 1,000 suspected cases each month.
The Hub incorporates tools like the Paper Mill Alarm and supports data sharing compliant with competition laws. Publishers such as AIP Publishing and others have joined, integrating checks into editorial workflows. Complementary efforts include United2Act, a collaboration between STM and COPE focused on combating paper mills through shared guidance and technology.
Individual publishers have invested in AI-driven systems. Frontiers employs its AIRA platform for pre-peer-review checks on language, image integrity, ethics statements, and network patterns. COPE has issued updated retraction guidance addressing deception and fraud, including paper mill cases.
STM Integrity Hub resources offer further details on these collaborative detection efforts.
Recommendations for Researchers, Institutions, and Funders
Addressing the issue requires systemic change. Researchers should prioritize quality over quantity, documenting data rigorously and avoiding services promising quick publications. Institutions can revise evaluation criteria to emphasize research impact and integrity rather than raw publication counts.
Funders play a key role by supporting open science practices, such as preregistration and data sharing, which make fabrication harder. Journals benefit from investing in forensic tools, training editors and reviewers on red flags, and participating in cross-publisher initiatives like the STM Hub.
Education campaigns targeting early-career academics about the risks and ethical implications can deter participation. International cooperation remains essential, given the global nature of both the problem and the solutions.
Future Outlook and Path Forward
While the threat from paper mills is serious, industry responses demonstrate progress. Layered screening combining technological tools with human expertise, following models like the Swiss Cheese approach, offers promise for intercepting fraudulent submissions earlier.
Continued investment in detection infrastructure, incentive reform, and cultural shifts toward valuing rigorous, reproducible science will be critical. As generative AI evolves, so too must the safeguards protecting the integrity of the scholarly record.
Stakeholders across academia, publishing, and funding agencies must sustain momentum to ensure that published research reliably advances knowledge rather than commercial interests.
