Trevor Marsden: Rallying for the open access movement - The GW Hatchet

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-03-07

Summary:

"In the wake of internet pioneer Aaron Swartz’s suicide after illegally downloading 4.8 million journal articles from the online database JSTOR and the federal government’s decision Feb. 22 to make all taxpayer-funded federal research available to the public within one year of publication, it is clear that open access to information is a national issue. This situation has increasing importance for colleges and universities as the cost of academic materials continues to rise. As communities charged with educating and preparing the next generation of American leaders, it is critical that GW and its professors shape this national debate by siding with open access. It’s up to universities like GW and their faculty to play a role in making research available outside academic circles so society can benefit from new knowledge and discoveries. There are a number of obstacles that prevent universities like GW from providing free access to information, including publishers of academic journals and university professors themselves. Unfortunately, publishers maintain a virtual monopoly on information. And price-fixing on the part of the publishing industry has made an impact on colleges and universities across the country. Even Harvard University has felt the high cost of information. According to a memo released by the Harvard Faculty Advisory Council last April, the two most expensive journals have increased the price for individual access to articles by over 145 percent over the preceding six years, prompting the traditionally plutocratic college to call the pricing situation for academic journals 'untenable.' If Harvard – with an endowment of more than $30 billion – is feeling the constraint of journal costs, then imagine the financial hardship for a university like GW, with a comparatively paltry endowment of $1.3 billion. Daniel Chudnov, director of scholarly technology at Gelman Library, said the problem is one that GW will have to contend with in the very near future. 'The pressure to pay more and more when we know that the biggest publishers are reaping very high profit margins…something’s gotta give,' he told me. The inevitable question is how colleges and universities should move forward. Some responsibility falls on publishing companies, which must stop increasing their costs. But realistically, that probably won’t happen anytime soon. The answer must come from professors, some of whom are hesitant to put their research online for free. 'Most professors have careers, and they are trying to advance in their careers. And that includes getting tenure. Where they publish is very important, and they are always looking to publish in selective journals,' Charles Garris, an engineering professor and chairman of the Faculty Senate Committee on Professional Ethics and Academic Freedom, said in an interview ..."

Link:

http://www.gwhatchet.com/2013/03/07/trevor-marsden-rallying-for-the-open-access-movement/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.comment oa.libraries oa.impact oa.prestige oa.librarians oa.prices oa.mit oa.profits oa.harvard.u oa.jstor oa.george_washington.u oa.guerrilla

Date tagged:

03/07/2013, 16:42

Date published:

03/07/2013, 11:42