We connect you with journal editors to secure peer review invitation opportunities, strengthening your EB1A "judging the work of others" evidence. We handle the outreach; the journal editor makes the final decision.
EB1A peer review invitations matter because they create documented evidence: who invited the applicant, when the invitation was issued, which journal or platform was involved, what the review concerned, whether the review was completed, and how the record supports judging the work of others.
GloryAbroad (森耀海外) helps applicants prepare editor outreach materials and connect with journal editors based on research fit. Journal editors independently decide whether to issue invitations, and applicants must complete all review work themselves.
Peer review records also strengthen recommendation letters. A recommender can point to real review activity when explaining that the applicant is recognized as someone qualified to evaluate work in the field.
"Judging the work of others" is one of the 10 EB1A criteria — relatively achievable but requires documented invitation emails as evidence.
Having reviewers mention your peer review experience further strengthens the recommendation letter content.
Being invited to review shows you are recognized as an expert reviewer in your field.
Applicants can pursue legitimate review invitations through research fit, publication history, reviewer platforms, journal editor outreach, and professional networks.
They can support the criterion related to judging the work of others. Applicants should keep invitation emails, completion confirmations, platform records, and a clear timeline.
We prepare editor communication materials and conduct outreach based on the applicant’s field background. Editors independently decide whether to invite, and applicants complete reviews themselves.
They give recommenders concrete facts to discuss when describing the applicant’s professional recognition and ability to evaluate work in the field.
Keep invitation emails, completion confirmations, journal or platform records, dates, manuscript titles when allowed, and editor acknowledgements.