Portland State University has initiated disciplinary proceedings against their philosophy professor Peter Boghossian for conspiring with colleagues to submit more than two dozen satirical papers to feminist theory and race-studies journals in an effort to prove those disciplines are academically fraudulent. The hoax papers, some of which were accepted by journals and which were revealed back in October, made Boghossian and his cohorts the international toast of "free thinkers" concerned that college campuses have become paralyzed by political orthodoxy.
After their ruse was revealed, the three authors described their project in an October article in the webzine Areo, which Pluckrose edits. Their goal, they wrote, was to "to study, understand, and expose the reality of grievance studies, which is corrupting academic research." They contend that scholarship that tends to social grievances now dominates some fields, where students and others are bullied into adhering to scholars' worldviews, while lax publishing standards allow the publication of clearly ludicrous articles if the topic is politically fashionable.
Sources:
The Chronicle of Higher Education : Proceedings Start Against 'Sokal Squared' Hoax Professor (archive)
Willamette Week : Professor Who Authored Hoax Papers Says Portland State University Has Launched Disciplinary Proceedings Against Him (archive)
(Score: 1, Disagree) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 12 2019, @09:07PM
I think you are conflating a couple of issues. People do research because they think the area is important and they expect the investigation will improve conditions of the people affected by the topics being researched. Similar to reporters, c.f. the famous quote that 'The job of the newspaper is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.' That's not the same as advocating for an ideological viewpoint.
But even accepting your premise, just because the authors of some articles are practicing advocacy doesn't mean the journal's editorial practices are necessarily biased. At least one reviewer of a hoax article came forward and said that he treated the hoax article on the presumption of good faith and gave feedback in that context - that the paper's author was inexperienced rather than partisan.