ABSTRACT Journal editors play a pivotal yet often unseen role in shaping the direction and integrity of academic discourse. Their responsibilities include coordinating peer review, ensuring ethical oversight and curating content that reflects both relevance and scholarly merit. In an era marked by misinformation and growing scepticism toward experts, editorial processes serve as a safeguard for public trust in scientific publishing. This reflective account draws on personal experience as a section editor for Emergency Medicine Australasia , highlighting the transition from trainee contributor to a steward of original research and reviews. Editorial servitude has offered valuable insights into academic publishing, improved writing skills and a deeper understanding of complex subject matters. Editors influence scholarly inquiry through thoughtful manuscript selection, reviewer engagement and constructive feedback. Although the path to editorial roles is rarely direct, it begins with opportunities to demonstrate capability. Far from passive arbiters, editors are the invisible architects of academia and custodians of academic credibility.
Viet Tran (Fri,) studied this question.