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Re: On the distinction between for-profit and non-profit
Early last year, Andrew Braid of the British Library looked at the figures
from Ulrich's. when inactive titles were excluded, the number of active
or forthcoming peer-reviewed journals listed came down to 21,122. Of
these, those with the word 'society, association, institute or
institution' in the publisher field numbered 6,793; a further 2,441 had
the word 'university' - 9,234 in all, or nearly half.
This is likely, however, to be an underestimate of those actually
published by not-for-profit organisations - it does not include equivalent
terms in languages other than English; nor other types of NFP publisher -
charities, inter-governmental organisations, research institutes and the
like; nor does it include journals owned by societies etc, and published
under contract by third parties.
It would be very interesting (but difficult!) to dig a little deeper and
come up with a more definitive figure, but it does seem clear that at
least half, and possibly considerably more, of all journals are published
by or for NFP organisations. And given that even the largest NFP
publishers are very much smaller than the largest commercial ones, it
probably also means that there are many more NFP publishers than
commercial.
I also looked (earlier this year) at the top-ranked ISI titles and it is
interesting to look at the percentage of nonprofit titles:
69% of the top 500 are NFP
70% of the top 400
73% of the top 300
74% of the top 200
77% of the top 100
85% of the top 20
80% of the top 10
While I fully concede that ISI rankings are not the only measure of
quality, they are certainly one...
For what the difference actually is, see the article I wrote some time ago
entitled 'What's so special about not-for-profit publishers?'
(http://puck.ingentaconnect.com/vl=6194886/cl=59/nw=1/rpsv/cgi-bin/linker?ini=alpsp&reqidx=/cw/alpsp/09531513/v14n3/s1/p163)
Sally Morris, Chief Executive
Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers
South House, The Street, Clapham, Worthing, West Sussex BN13 3UU, UK
Email: sally.morris@alpsp.org
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jan Velterop" <velteropvonleyden@btinternet.com>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, December 06, 2005 11:58 PM
Subject: On the distinction between for-profit and non-profit
In the discussion about the McAfee and Bergstrom data the issue of
profit versus non-profit featured repeatedly. It is my impression that
far more journals are for profit than is apparent in that dataset. There
is nothing wrong with being for profit, of course, and many of the
journals labelled 'non-profit' aim to have a financial surplus. I call
that a profit. Their owners/publishers may be not-for- profit, but that
only means that they don't have to pay tax and that the surplus
generated has, by law, to be spent in a certain way or ploughed back
into the organisation. It doesn't mean that the journals work on a pure
cost-recovery basis. Should we know which journals price their
subscriptions on a pure cost-recovery basis, without profit or surplus,
then we might have something to distinguish them in meaningful
categories of this sort.
Jan Velterop