Digital access to knowledge: Research chat with Harvard’s Peter Suber – Journalist's Resource: Research for Reporting, from Harvard Shorenstein Center
abernard102@gmail.com 2012-10-16
Summary:
Use the link to access the transcript of the interview introduced as follows: "How much access is there to cutting-edge research online? The reality is that access to the world’s deepest knowledge – that produced by professional researchers – remains contested in the digital space.
The Internet is democratizing access to many forms of information – but not necessarily all forms at the same rate. Twenty years ago, scholarly journal articles were found only on library shelves, or came as hard copies through mail subscriptions. With the Internet, the possibility of access changed, but academic publishers continue to charge fees for subscriptions to many important journals, with the goal of maintaining traditional business models. For journalists, bloggers, private businesses and interested citizens, and of course researchers, Internet pay walls still restrict access to much of this knowledge, even some that is taxpayer-funded. Whether or not the digital trends that have transformed the news media and music industries may yet reshape the world of scholarship remains to be seen.
Peter Suber is director of the Harvard Open Access Project and a fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet & Society. His new book, Open Access, examines an emerging movement to bring research to everyone who might want to make use of it. Suber envisions a richer online world in which more scholarship is made open, in part for researchers themselves and in part for journalists and other 'bridge builders' between knowledge and society to report it, summarize it, translate it into lay terms, make it more visible — and start connecting it with public policy issues or new developments in other fields. 'Imagine what would happen if all journalists who write about scholarship had access to primary sources themselves,' Suber says. 'Imagine if they could put links to primary sources in their publications, and imagine if readers could click through for free online to those primary sources.' Open access to scholarship is a topic that not only affects the resources available to the media in the future but is a live political issue here and abroad that touches on core issues relating to technology and democracy. As part of our ongoing 'research chat' series, Journalist’s Resource recently caught up with Suber to discuss the current state of access to research in the digital age ..."