The lack of resources for ethical open access journals hurts academia and the public – Universitetsläraren, 1 feb 2023

ioi_ab's bookmarks 2023-02-03

Summary:

"...While decentralised initiatives such as Quartz OA and Libraria promise to unlock crowdsourcing tools to alleviate financial hardships for non-commercial Open Access journals, a wider discussion still needs to take place across the higher education sector and—one could add—society at large, about how best to remove the economic, legal, and technological barriers to accessing research findings. Ultimately, this is a question of ownership: who owns the research we collectively produce and who, if anyone, should be able to profit from it? In the meantime, at a bare minimum universities, research funders, and national consortiums should set aside substantial funding to support the ethical, non-profit Open Access ecosystem. In practical terms, this means earmarking funding for already established non-profit Open Access publications and providing incentives, resources, and support to allow editorial boards to ‘flip’ journals currently being published through agreements with commercial publishers to ethical Open Access models...."

Link:

https://universitetslararen.se/2023/02/01/the-lack-of-resources-for-ethical-open-access-journals-hurts-academia-and-the-public/

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.journals oa.recommendations oa.consortia oa.funding oa.redirection oa.budgets oa.gold oa.economics_of oa.obstacles

Date tagged:

02/03/2023, 05:58

Date published:

02/03/2023, 00:58