Half-life is half the story | Unlocking Research

peter.suber's bookmarks 2019-06-23

Summary:

"This week the STM Frankfurt Conference was told that a shift away from gold Open Access towards green would mean some publishers would not be ‘viable’ according to a story in The Bookseller. The argument was that support for green OA in the US and China would mean some publishers will collapse and the community will ‘regret it’.

It is not surprising that the publishing industry is worried about a move away from gold OA policies. They have proved extraordinarily lucrative in the UK with Wiley and Elsevier each pocketing an extra £2 million thanks to the RCUK block grant funds to support the RCUK policy on Open Access.

But let’s get something straight. There is no evidence that permitting researchers to make a copy of their work available in a repository results in journal subscriptions being cancelled. None.

The September 2013 UK Business, Innovation and Skills Committee Fifth Report: Open Access stated “There is no available evidence base to indicate that short or even zero embargoes cause cancellation of subscriptions”. In 2012 the Committee for Economic Development Digital Connections Council in The Future of Taxpayer-Funded Research: Who Will Control Access to the Results? concluded that “No persuasive evidence exists that greater public access as provided by the NIH policy has substantially harmed subscription-supported STM publishers over the last four years or threatens the sustainability of their journals”..."

Link:

https://unlockingresearch-blog.lib.cam.ac.uk/?p=331

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.green oa.cancellations oa.misunderstandings oa.publishers oa.debates oa.repositories

Date tagged:

06/23/2019, 10:35

Date published:

06/23/2019, 06:35