bjoern.brembs.blog » How to convince faculty to support subscription cancellations

lterrat's bookmarks 2017-04-02

Summary:

"Here’s a short, non-exhaustive list of arguments I think ought to be very convincing for all but perhaps the most Luddite faculty,  in defense of a budget shift from subscriptions to in-house infrastructure. Of course, one would preface such a list with a short explanation as to what is being argued:

'Dear faculty member,

as you may have heard in the news, our institution has joined a global initiative of hundreds of other scholarly institutions which strives to modernize our scholarly infrastructure. Our infrastructure has not undergone extensive modernization since its inception in the early 1990s, so the modernization is long overdue. One part of the modernization entails moving subscription funds over to infrastructure funds. Above and beyond the technical limitations of subscription literature (with which you are likely more than familiar), there are many other reasons why subscriptions are among the worst technologies to subsidize with tax funds. Here are some of the reasons why we now have to cancel subscriptions and how you will directly benefit from the consequences of these cancellations:

  • subscription funds go to corporations that waste >90% of the public moneys spent on them. Only their shareholders benefit
  • you have likely endured many cancellations in the past that came without any added benefit to you, beyond saving your institution money. This time, we will use the saved money to implement services that will benefit you directly: they will minimize your tedious work with writing, reading, data management and code, so you can focus on your research even more. Stay tuned, these services will be presented shortly.
  • once we have successfully transitioned, there will likely be funds left over, which will flow right back into your research budget
  • oh, and if you use our shiny new tools, you won’t even notice that we’re canceling subscriptions, as these tools will fetch (almost) all your literature for you
  • please pardon the dust while we remodel
  • for a more exhaustive list of benefits, please see [list of benefits]
  • please feel free to contact us at any time in case you feel your personal needs have not been addressed satisfactorily

Of course, one would formulate these arguments a little more professionally than I have done here, but I wanted to convey the gist of where the thrust of the argument might go."

Link:

http://bjoern.brembs.net/2017/03/how-to-convince-faculty-to-support-subscription-cancellations/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » lterrat's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.hei oa.journals

Date tagged:

04/02/2017, 16:48

Date published:

04/02/2017, 12:48