It’s peer reviewed if it has the name of a peer-reviewed journal on it. If it’s on arxiv (a pre-print server) it’s not. (Or not yet, or published on several platforms/journals.)
A lot of them will have a front matter, a Wikipedia article. Be cited a lot. And you’ll find them in a university library. You might even have access to a library’s catalogue without being a student or member. Being peer-reviewed will be in the description.
And the bogus “journals” are kind of well-known. I think you’ll find information with a simple Google search.
It’s peer reviewed if it has the name of a peer-reviewed journal on it. If it’s on arxiv (a pre-print server) it’s not. (Or not yet, or published on several platforms/journals.)
Where do journals indicate that they are?
A lot of them will have a front matter, a Wikipedia article. Be cited a lot. And you’ll find them in a university library. You might even have access to a library’s catalogue without being a student or member. Being peer-reviewed will be in the description.
And the bogus “journals” are kind of well-known. I think you’ll find information with a simple Google search.
For example: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scientific_journals
“peer-reviewed” is always within the first sentences if you click on something.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Identifying_reliable_sources_(medicine)#Biomedical_journals is a good guide for Biomed