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SCOAP3, accreditation, and access to research laboratories
Gene Sprouse of the American Physical Society expresses the
concerns of APS about ongoing sustainability of their publishing
program with a shift from subscriptions to open access
publishing, in his message:
http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/ListArchives/0712/msg00014.html.
SCOAP3 is a consortium within physics exploring the idea of
shifting physics publishing to a fully open access model.
The fear is that if payment is voluntary, libraries may choose to
drop out of the consortium. This is a reasonable concern.
Thanks for Gene for raising it.
Here is a thought: some of the members of SCOAP3 have access to
facilities which are necessary for researchers in high energy
physics, such as CERN, the world's largest particle physics
laboratory.
Could members with such facilities have rules about participation
in SCOAP3 for institutions whose scientists would like to be
visiting researchers? It should be possible to formulate rules
that are flexible to meet the needs of wealthy and less-wealthy
institutions, those with many physicists, and those with few.
If participation in SCOAP3 were a requirement to participate in
the research, drop-outs should be highly unlikely.
Because research in this area is expensive, a price structure
based on research intensity would be fair.
Another approach to fairness for different countries would be to
translate pricing into average wage equivalents. For example, if
a reasonable price for a high-intensity research institution in a
western country equates with an average month's salary for a
researcher, then have a price structure that charges the
equivalent of an average month's wages in local currency. This
way, wealthy and poor institutions could be equal contributors,
even if the revenue received were not equal.
Physics may be unique in having key central facilities such as
CERN.
However, something that all worthwhile academic institutions do
need is accreditation. In order to be accredited, an academic
institution needs to have, among many other things, a library
which meets particular standards.
Perhaps, in the future, one of these standards for libraries will
be participating in dissemination of scholarly information.
Larger or research-intensive universities may prefer to have
their own OA publishing programs and/or open access archives.
Smaller schools, or those without research programs, could
contribute to a central fund. This central fund could then be
used to subsidize projects such as SCOAP3, or other existing or
potential open access projects, from subsidizing OA journals to
subsidizing university presses so that they could provide full
open access. Like having a library, such contributions could be
considered essential for accreditation rather than optional.
With this approach, smaller and less research-intensive
institutions would have an opportunity to participate in paying
for scholarly publishing, much as they do now with subscriptions,
as well as clear guidelines on what is expected.
There are many models within universities, libraries and library
consortia, and governments that could be considered for managing
such central funds. There need not be a single fund; there could
be many.
The output of such a fund would be the open access materials
themselves; this is an approach that lends itself very well to a
transparent accountability.
Any opinion expressed in this e-mail is that of the author alone,
and does not reflect the opinion or policy of BC Electronic
Library Network or Simon Fraser University Library.
Heather Morrison, MLIS
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com