Social Science, Humanities Publishing Squeezed by Global Emphasis on Scientific, Medical R&D: Simba Report - Press Release - Digital Journal

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-01-17

Summary:

"Playing second fiddle to scientific, technical and medical (STM) research is hurting social science and humanities (SSH) fields and, by extension, the market for publishing its findings — this according to 'Global Social Science and Humanities Publishing 2013-2014,' the latest report from Simba Information, a leading media industry forecast and analysis firm. The disparity plays out in three main areas: research funding, library purchase decisions and public policy decision affecting academia. Simba estimates research spending in SSH subjects is one-tenth of what governments and private foundations dedicate to STM discovery. Academic libraries—a primary customer and bridge to the end user—have had difficulty keeping up with the rising cost of scientific and technical content. As a result, SSH materials often come out on the short end of budget allocation decisions. Books play a more important role in SSH than in STM publishing. While the typical academic library spends less than 10% of its STM collection development budget on books, more than 50% of social science and humanities publishing goes toward books. On the policy front, debate over open access to research papers is viewed through the prism of STM and social scientists worry about collateral damage to their disciplines. SSH publications have different price points, a different funding environment and different patterns of usage, but STM is driving the debate. Simba estimates the global SSH publishing market shrank in 2012. A weak euro, declining print books and precipitous declines in public library database sales offset continued growth in online delivery of book collections and journal site licenses. Global sales were down an average compound rate of 2.5% since 2010. E-books, books sold as apps on smart phones, for e-readers and digital collections are all growing, but print book sales are in terminal decline. Journals are the only growing publishing activity in SSH. Journals benefit from the emergence of new disciplines and are being carried along in big deals by large STM publishers who also publish SSH titles. Online sales have been falling and, in contrast to the situation in STM, are forecast to be essentially flat. While innovative new multimedia services are taking advantage of technology to deliver video, sound and text in exciting interactive ways, aggregations of magazine and newspaper articles that made up the bulk of public library sales are eroding badly ..."

Link:

http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/1683564

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.reports oa.simba oa.humanities oa.books oa.libraries oa.librarians oa.universities oa.colleges oa.budgets oa.policies oa.funders oa.hei oa.ssh

Date tagged:

01/17/2014, 10:48

Date published:

01/17/2014, 05:48