Elsevier Abandons Anti-Open Access Bill

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-08-20

Summary:

“Publishing company Elsevier has backpedalled on its support of the Research Works Act (RWA)... US Representatives Darrel Issa (R-CA) and Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) introduced the RWA into the House of Representatives last December, and the Association of American Publishers, a trade group to which Elsevier and many other journal publishers belong, contributed heavily to drawing up the bill. Elsevier had been staunch supporters of the RWA, which would have rolled back the National Institutes of Health Public Access Policy—a mandate that any published research that was funded by the federal science agency be submitted to the publically accessible digital archive PubMed Central upon acceptance for publication. But in January, renowned Cambridge University mathematician Timothy Gowers sparked a boycott of the publisher based on criticism involving the company’s business practices and its support of the RWA... Tom Reller, an Elsevier spokesperson, told The Scientist that the company still opposes rigid government mandates regarding science publishing but hopes that withdrawing support of the RWA will quell some of the complaints the company had heard. ‘We don’t necessarily think this is going to end the boycott or anything,’ he said, ‘but hopefully this helps everything calm down a little bit so we can get back to having a dialogue with funding bodies, both nonprofit and government.’ But some boycotters aren’t changing their positions based on Elsevier’s latest move. University of North Carolina theoretical biology PhD student Joel Adamson said that the company’s decision was welcomed, but that it didn’t go far enough to deter his support for the boycott... Adamson added that if Elsevier would abandon ‘bundling practices,’ in which the company allegedly groups desirable science journals with less-august titles in package deals for university libraries, it would go further towards changing his mind. Albert Einstein College of Medicine geneticist Brett Abrahams said that he considers the decision a token gesture that means little in light of what he sees as Elsevier placing ‘the burden of the publication cost on the funders and on the public.’ ‘They’re still anti open-access,’ Abrahams said of Elsevier. ‘They’ve just taken a very far reaching outrageous position and backed off it a little bit.’ Judging from Elsevier’s statement announcing their withdrawal of support for the RWA, the company will continue to support similar legislation and oppose other open-access efforts, such as the recently introduced Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA) of 2012... ‘While withdrawing support for the Research Works Act, we will continue to join with those many other nonprofit and commercial publishers and scholarly societies that oppose repeated efforts to extend mandates through legislation,’ the Elsevier statement read. ‘I was amazed that they still continue to defend the merits of the RWA,’ Abrahams added.

Link:

http://the-scientist.com/2012/02/28/elsevier-abandons-anti-open-access-bill/

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.comment oa.mandates oa.usa oa.frpaa oa.legislation oa.rwa oa.nih oa.elsevier oa.copyright oa.libraries oa.costs oa.aap oa.policies

Authors:

abernard

Date tagged:

08/20/2012, 14:47

Date published:

02/29/2012, 20:07