Open access and the humanities: reimagining our future | Higher Education Network | Guardian Professional

abernard102@gmail.com 2013-03-26

Summary:

"When it comes to open access in the humanities, it does not feel, to many, as though they were born open or are achieving openness but, rather, that they are having openness violently thrust upon them. Although the open access movement has been going strong for 10 years and has had good take-up in certain scientific disciplines, such as physics, the humanities currently lack the infrastructure and funding mechanisms needed to support the transition period triggered by RCUK's (Research Councils UK) mandate. Amid erroneous circulations of fear uncertainty and doubt surrounding open licensing, the whole setup appears anarchic and shambolic to many who just want to buckle down and write their research ... Of the commercial publishers, several interesting efforts have arisen that merit attention for their attempt to reconfigure the humanities in a mega-journal, melting-pot mode. Dan Scott of the Humanities and Social Sciences Directories projects, for instance, reports a total of 12,000 downloads for their first five papers; an impressive statistic of reach, the problems inherent in usage metrics notwithstanding. SAGE Open, operating on a similarly affordable (and waiverable) $99 article processing charge, is also pressing ahead with its efforts, although this appears to be a more social science-centric undertaking, given SAGE's backdrop in that arena.  More excitingly, perhaps though, are the potentially game-changing academic led initiatives. A fine instance of this, among others, is theOpen Humanities Press, an impressive collection of journals and open access monographs with a strong scholar backing. The only crime that this press ever committed was being so far ahead of its time. With the degree of academic capital behind it, and the shifting politics of the open access scene, its time is surely to come.  My own project, co–led with my colleague Caroline Edwards, is called the Open Library of the Humanities and we aim to offer a low-APC (academic publishing costs) or APC-free solution for rigorously reviewed, digitally preserved work across the humanities. We have high-profile backing for the initiative and have begun by engaging scholars in discussions about what we want and need from a 21st century scholarly communication apparatus, rather than imposing the square peg of technical solutions to the round hole of social problems.  The impacts of these projects for academics cannot be underestimated, even if unseen. In just their ambition and scope they will regulate publisher excess (albeit a lesser phenomenon in the humanities) and will help to erode the unrealistic expectation of £2000 APCs that some wish to impose. Secondly, these projects represent utopian spaces in which academics can re-seize some limited agency, to not have things solely done to us, but, even if triggered through a reaction, to be active participants in our own destinies.  Of course, some will argue, publishing is labour, intensive labour, and academics are already overworked; why should they take on additional tasks? The answer is twofold: 1. because we do much of this labour at present: editorial work, peer review, copyediting are already (mostly) unpaid (and unrewarded) jobs that are deemed services to the field; 2) If we don't, others will decide for us and we will be wholly at their mercy. Change is coming, whether we like it or not, and it seems far more prudent, to my mind, to attempt to shape it, even if, as Walter Benjamin might put it, the angel of history will be blown backwards into the future with calamity amassing at its feet ..."

Link:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/higher-education-network/blog/2013/mar/25/open-access-humanities-future

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.gold oa.licensing oa.comment oa.mandates oa.copyright oa.uk oa.metrics oa.usage oa.attitudes oa.books oa.humanities oa.prices oa.funders oa.fees oa.rcuk oa.misunderstandings oa.open_humanities_press oa.open_library_humanities oa.sage_open oa.social_sciences_directories oa.humanities_directories oa.libre oa.policies oa.ssh oa.journals

Date tagged:

03/26/2013, 14:56

Date published:

03/26/2013, 10:56