Historians clash over open access movement | Inside Higher Ed

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-01-06

Summary:

"If the open access movement can’t replace the traditional publishing model of scholarly journals, what problem is the effort trying to solve?  Participants during a session titled 'Open Access and Publishing in History and the Social Sciences: Opportunities and Challenges' at the American Historical Association’s annual meeting clashed over that question Friday afternoon as they debated the role of open access journals in promoting scholarly research. Journal subscriptions have traditionally funded the dissemination of research, but supporters of the open-access movement have experimented with shifting the costs elsewhere. One model, gold open access, requires articles to be made available free online when they are published in print, and the author pays a processing fee -- often about $2,000 -- to offset the costs. Another model, green open access, makes a rough copy of a published article available through a public repository. Some universities have also adopted policies that require faculty members to make their published research publicly available.   Those and other open-access initiatives were championed during the session by Mary Ellen K. Davis, executive director of the Association of College and Research Libraries. The ACRL made its scholarly journal, College & Research Libraries, open access in 2011, and the publication will this month go online only after members 'begged' the organization to end its print edition, Davis said.  But Davis faced opposition from fellow panelists Robert A. Schneider, professor of history at Indiana University at Bloomington and editor-in-chief of the American Historical Review, and Harold J. Cook, a professor of history at Brown University who serves on the journal’s board of editors.  Cook pointed out that some critics have derided prestigious journals with high thresholds for publication as 'luxury journals, as if high-quality publication were a luxury rather than a necessity.' He concluded his presentation by saying open access journals should be considered new types of academic journals, not replacements for established ones, and that individual scholars are best suited to decide how their research should be disseminated.  'Publishers are not the enemies of authors, but partners of authors,' Cook said. He suggested the two parties should come together to negotiate the future of scholarly publishing.  As the panelists finished their prepared remarks, Schneider challenged Davis’s assertion that funding scholarly publishing through a journal subscription model (such as the one used by the American Historical Review) is becoming unsustainable.  'You say that the subscription process is broken,' Schneider said. 'It does work to some degree -- arguably to a great degree. I would argue, however, that the author processing fee is ... not only broken, it’s wrong. If really the choice is going from subscription -- which has got problems or is increasingly difficult -- and to another process which I think is utterly unacceptable, then I think the choice is pretty clear.'  Davis, who specified in her presentation that open access is not intended to be a business model, rushed to clarify that she did not think the debate should come down to subscriptions versus processing fees. 'I think author fees is one possible solution, and I don’t think it will work well in the humanities. I don’t think it will work well in the social sciences or librarianship,' she said ..."

Link:

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2014/01/06/historians-clash-over-open-access-movement

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.gold oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.comment oa.libass oa.societies oa.libraries oa.events oa.presentations oa.prestige oa.librarians oa.prices oa.fees oa.history oa.debates oa.acrl oa.aha oa.journals oa.humanities oa.ssh

Date tagged:

01/06/2014, 09:30

Date published:

01/06/2014, 04:30