Logrolling
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Logrolling is a colorful phrase that refers to trading favors, a synonym to quid pro quo.
For example, it may describe vote trading by legislative members to obtain passage of actions of interest to each legislative member.[citation needed]
The term is also used for similar activities in academics, notably the "cross quoting" of papers in order to drive up reference counts.[citation needed]
The Nuttall Encyclopedia describes as "mutual praise by authors of each other's work."
A suggested origin is the old custom of neighbors assisting each other with the moving of logs. If two neighbors had cut a lot of timber which needed to be moved, it made more sense for them to work together to roll the logs—"If you'll help me roll my logs, I'll help you roll yours."[citation needed]
Another derivation is from the sport by the same name in which two contestants try to topple each other into the water by standing on a log. Each must keep up with the other or risk taking a spill, so it appears to be cooperative.[citation needed]
Spy Magazine ran a feature entitled "Logrolling in Our Time" that cited suspicious or humorous examples of mutually admiring book jacket blurbs by pairs of authors.
Private Eye magazine regularly draws attention to alleged logrolling by authors in "books of the year" features published by British newspapers and magazines.[1]
[edit] See Also
[edit] References
- ^ Private Eye, 21 December 2007.
This article incorporates text from the public domain 1907 edition of The Nuttall Encyclopædia.