What a Mass Exodus at a Linguistics Journal Means for Scholarly Publishing | 2015 | The Chronicle of Higher Education

ab1630's bookmarks 2018-07-27

Summary:

"It was the kind of exit designed to make a statement. Last week all six editors and all 31 editorial-board members resigned from Lingua, a prominent linguistics journal, after a disagreement with the journal’s publisher, Elsevier. The announcement re-energized concerns about the relationship between academics and for-profit companies, and the future of scholarly publishing. Lingua’s editors were worried that some libraries could no longer afford the price of the publication. In a "renegotiation" letter they sent to Elsevier in early October, citing a "changing academic-publishing paradigm," they laid out a number of conditions. At the top of the list: Lingua would become a fully open-access publication, and Elsevier would grant the editors ownership of the journal. But Elsevier rejected those proposals, and it plans to continue publishing Lingua under a new team...."

https://web.archive.org/web/20180727095447/https://www.chronicle.com/article/What-a-Mass-Exodus-at-a/234066

 

Link:

https://www.chronicle.com/article/What-a-Mass-Exodus-at-a/234066

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » ab1630's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.declarations_of_independence oa.gold oa.milestones oa.elsevier oa.resignations oa.prices oa.glossa oa.linguistics oa.negotiations oa.publishers oa.journals oa.ssh

Date tagged:

07/27/2018, 05:54

Date published:

07/27/2018, 01:54