1 / 12

The tension of Open Access: how not-for-profit publishers are reacting

The tension of Open Access: how not-for-profit publishers are reacting. Sally Morris Chief Executive, Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers. What is ALPSP?. The international trade association for not-for-profit publishers and those who work with them

gaius
Télécharger la présentation

The tension of Open Access: how not-for-profit publishers are reacting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The tension of Open Access:how not-for-profit publishers are reacting Sally Morris Chief Executive, Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers

  2. What is ALPSP? • The international trade association for not-for-profit publishers and those who work with them • Over 300 members in over 30 countries • Representation, advocacy, research, professional development, information, advice, good practice guidelines, collective initiatives

  3. What do I mean by not-for-profit publishers? • Learned societies, professional associations • University presses • Non-governmental organisations, charities… • Nearly 50% of journals in Ulrich’s published by NFPs • Many more published by commercial publishers on behalf of NFPs

  4. What’s different about NFP publishers? • Higher citations, lower prices • Most NFPs do make money • ‘it’s what you do with it that counts’ • NFPs do not pay taxes, or distribute dividends

  5. What do NFP publishers do with publishing surpluses? • Societies support their community through: • Conferences, research funding and grants, bursaries • Public education • Support of the society itself • University Presses support their university

  6. What do I mean by Open Access? • Unrestricted free access to research articles for everyone • Ways of achieving this: • Self-archiving • Personal, institutional, subject-based • Preprints, postprints, final published version • Open Access publishing • Delayed OA • Optional/hybrid OA • Full, immediate OA

  7. What problem is Open Access trying to solve? • Library funding crisis? • Inability of the ‘taxpayer’ to access research? • Inability of scholars to access all research?

  8. Why might NFP publishers support Open Access? • In keeping with mission to disseminate subject • In keeping with public education mission • Should scale with research funding (unlike library budgets)

  9. Why might NFP publishers worry about Open Access? • Is it viable? • Do authors want it? • If not, enforced adoption could destroy valuable journals • If yes, many experts predict reduction in profitability – direct effect on activities which benefit community

  10. What are NFP publishers doing about it? 1 – Self-archiving • ALPSP research (2003) showed 34% of publishers permitted preprint archiving, 60% postprint/published version • No difference between commercial and NFP • ROMEO project found very similar figures • Elsevier’s recent change of policy – now >80% of journals

  11. What are NFP publishers doing about it? 2 – OA publishing Delayed OA • 9% in ALPSP study, predominantly NFP • Increased since publication of DC principles • Partial/hybrid OA • Numerous experiments • Almost all NFP before Springer Open Choice • Full, immediate OA • Over 1200 journals in DOAJ • Mostly NFP apart from BioMed Central

  12. What happens next? • Things won’t change unless scholars change their behaviour • Do they want to? Should they be forced to? • Self-archiving is dependent on journals – but it could ultimately damage or destroy them • Is that what scholars want? • We need to know if OA publishing is viable • ALPSP/AAAS/HighWire research - financial and non-financial effects of each type of OA publishing

More Related