The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics: Publishers' Association survey on subscriptions: methodological critique

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-06-06

Summary:

“... The Association of Learned, Professional and Society Publishers (ALPSP) and the Publishers' Association just released the results of a survey asking if libraries would continue subscriptions if a majority of the content of research journals was freely available. The results of this study (downloadable from here) appear alarming - predicting catastrophic losses of subscriptions and subsequently journals and publishers! This post is a methodological critique. In summary, the recommendation of this study (against an OA mandate with a 6-month embargo) is not supported by the research presented - and most importantly, by the research omitted, which is in brief all of the  considerable evidence that would counter this recommendation, including a 2006 study by ALPSP itself which is not cited... The recommendation from this [current] study is:  ‘It is strongly recommended that no mandate is issued on making all or most journal articles available free of charge after a six month embargo until both libraries and publishers have had time to understand the issues better and have together taken steps to explore alternatives to a fully open access publishing model which could be mutually attractive.’  Here is the simply question asked by this ALPSP study:   ‘If the (majority of) content of research journals was freely available within 6 months of publication, would you continue to subscribe? Please give a separate answer for a) Scientific, Technical and Medical journals and b) Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences Journals if your library has holdings in both of these categories.’  Methodological critique: [1] The response rate to this study was 26%. With any survey, there is always the possibility of response bias... [2] A 2006 ALPSP survey... found that cancellations by librarians would likely be minimal even with IMMEDIATE free access... For example, even if 79% of content were freely available immediately on publication, only 10% of libraries surveyed indicated that they would consider cancelling the journals. That this study, conducted by the same association, which found very different results, was not cited... [3] The recommendation of this study implies that the only possible source of revenue for scholarly journals is subscriptions. Even for traditional journals, this has never been the only source of revenue... A growing number of libraries provide funds to cover article processing fees for open access. Why did the study not ask libraries if they have such a fund, or would consider developing one if there was a mandate for open access within 6 months? Why not mention that there are now more than 7,000 fully open access journals - including profitable commercial journals, and hundreds of society journals as noted by Suber & Sutton?... [4] A key recommendation of this study is that ‘no mandate is issued on making all or most journal articles available free of charge after a six month embargo until both libraries and publishers have had time to understand the issues better and have together taken steps to explore alternatives to a fully open access publishing model which could be mutually attractive’. This is puzzling. If the researchers think that libraries and publishers should work together (I agree), then why was was this a publisher-only study? Wouldn't a combined library / publisher / scholar study - like the PEER project - be a better approach? Further, this recommendation implies that the idea of libraries and publishers working together to make open access happen is a new one. As I've explained in a bit of detail in my previous post Society publishers: time to quit whining and make the leap to open access, these discussions have been going on for more than decade. Why not cite some of these discussions and related research, such as survey conducted by myself and other researchers across Canada to figure out how to help journals make the leap to open access? This is just one example!”

Link:

http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.ca/2012/06/publishers-association-survey-on.html

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.new oa.comment oa.reports oa.surveys oa.alpsp oa.publishers_association oa.societies oa.publishers oa.business_models oa.recommendations oa.mandates oa.embargoes oa.sustainability oa.prices oa.libraries oa.librarians oa.peer_project oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.comment oa.mandates oa.societies oa.libraries oa.surveys oa.sustainability oa.librarians oa.prices oa.reports oa.embargoes oa.recommendations oa.publishers_association oa.peer_project oa.alpsp oa.policies oa.economics_of

Authors:

heathermorrison

Date tagged:

06/06/2012, 15:24

Date published:

06/05/2012, 08:46