Is Access to Government-Funded Research a Right? - Reason.com

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-06-22

Summary:

“The White House petition seemed simple: “We petition the Obama administration to require free access over the Internet to scientific journal articles arising from taxpayer-funded research.” The petition very quickly reached the 25,000 threshold in early June required for the administration to have a staffer formally respond. (It has not yet done so.) The issues behind the efforts, though, are more complex than a simple sentence. The petition was introduced by access2research.org, the work of several proponents of the open access movement... Access2research aims to extend a model the National Institutes of Health (NIH) instituted in 2009. The NIH requires studies they’ve funded to become publicly available online within a year of publication... Free access is supported by the Association of Research Libraries, whose members have seen their subscription expenses soar over the past decade. It is opposed by the Association of American Publishers, whose members publish the journals. Here’s the central conflict: While government funding pays for the research, it does not cover the cost of peer review, editing and publication, costs borne by private publishers and then recouped (along with a tidy profit) through subscriptions to their journals. As such, Association of American Publishers’ members bristle at the government mandating their business models. The movement’s supporters, though, say they want the systems to accommodate the publishers’ needs and that NIH’s method has succeeded in doing so. ‘The policies we’re advocating for are to come up with a balance of the interests of the publishers in recouping the costs and the public being served,’ explained Heather Joseph, executive director of the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Research Coalition within the Association of Research Libraries. ‘We’re trying to find that sweet spot...’ Allan Adler, vice president for legal and government affairs for the Association of American Publishers, disagreed and questioned whether such a ‘sweet spot’ could ever be found... ‘The main issue about it is that there is such great diversity in this field,’ Adler said. ‘You have journals, some of which are for-profit, some non-profit. There are differences in the way they publish. … One size for an embargo doesn’t work. … ‘One year should be enough time.’ How does the government know that? How does the government decide that a 12-month embargo works in the same way for different areas and different kinds of publishers?’ Adler also pointed out that if the government wanted to make the research public, it could do so right now without forcing publishers to surrender their works. As part of the NIH’s policy, researchers are required to submit to the agency a final summary of their findings. There’s no reason why this summary couldn’t serve the public’s needs, Adler argued. But such a release would lack the peer-review input and editing the publishers provide, which in the academic world is such a vital component of the ‘publish or perish’ environment. ‘In the mainstream, peer review is still considered one of your professional duties,’ said Michael Carroll, professor of law and director of the Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property at American University’s Washington College of Law in Washington, D.C. Carroll is one of the proponents of the open access petition, as well as one of the founding board members of Creative Commons, a non-profit devoted to expanding the nature of copyright to allow for more control in the sharing of creative works. Academics aren’t paid for peer review, but there are still significant costs on the publishers’ end in order to manage the process on behalf of the researcher. For the heavyweights of scientific journals, like those of Nature Publishing Group, the demand for an in-depth peer review process – not just to validate the science, but the value of the research – is probably not going to decline anytime soon. But just as Adler challenged a one-size-fits-all publishing model, Carroll said some in the field wonder the same about the peer review process and are beginning to look at alternative financing methods...PLoS One is an example of such an alternative system, which streamlines the peer review process but then keeps the process open for public comment or annotation after publishing...”

Link:

http://reason.com/archives/2012/06/20/is-access-to-government-funded-research

Updated:

08/16/2012, 06:08

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.licensing oa.comment oa.government oa.libass oa.mandates oa.usa oa.nih oa.green oa.advocacy oa.signatures oa.petitions oa.copyright oa.societies oa.libraries oa.plos oa.peer_review oa.librarians oa.sparc oa.aap oa.prices oa.profits oa.embargoes oa.budgets oa.debates oa.arl oa.access2research oa.plos oa.acs oa.acs oa.repositories oa.libre oa.policies oa.creative_commons

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

06/22/2012, 22:59

Date published:

06/22/2012, 23:59