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Re: No, Mandating Self-Archiving Is Not Like Invading Iraq! Part II
I haven't seen Part III yet, Stevan, but let me add just a few
points to clarify my meaning.
I didn't intend for the Bush analogy to be "alarmist" in the
sense you read into it. On the contrary, if anything, I'm
supporting your point that universities should be doing
everything they can now to put into place a system (whether based
on self-archiving or something else--but who pays for CrossRef?)
that will actually be able to function if the hypothesized
withdrawal of large STM publishers were to happen suddenly, not
be lulled into thinking that change will be gradual and will
allow time for all parts of the system to readjust without
undergoing any great transition pains if FRPAA were to turn out
to be the "tipping point" after all.
I still think you are being way too optimistic to think that the
system will reach an equilibrium again quickly and painlessly. I
don't question that many people will see that funds will need to
be reallocated from one purpose (subscriptions) to another
(author fees). But I have lived in a university environment long
enough (40 years) to realize how difficult change is to effect.
Again, I remind you that many, many people have long recognized
that the tenure-and-promotion system is not working the way it
should, but it has been extremely difficult to bring about change
of any major kind. See the new MLA Report.
It will be especially difficult to make the transition work
smoothly if we have for an extended period of time a mixed system
with subscriptions continuing for some journals while OA takes
over others. Librarians may not so readily want to give up their
funding for subscriptions when there are still many to pay for;
or they may want to take advantage of having more funds to
allocate to buying monographs, where their collections have
suffered because of the burden of STM journal costs. Will it
again come down to a struggle between scientists asking, this
time, for libraries to pay their author fees instead of buying
more books for the humanists? Will the outcome necessarily be the
same? It's not a simple matter, I think.
I'm worrying, too, not just about what will happen with journals
but what the effects on monograph publishing will be. In
humanities, at least, it can't continue to happen that more and
more journal literature is more widely accessible because
available online, while the monograph literature is ever more
segregated and confined to a small number of printed books. This
goes against the grain of the interconnected web that knowledge
wants to be. But, then, how does OA come to monographs? There I
see the issue of author fees being a lot more difficult to
resolve because the level of magnitude of cost ($20,000 to
$25,000 for an average monograph exclusive of all costs
associated with its physical format) is much higher. Maybe
universities, in hiring junior faculty on the tenure track, will
need to throw in $50,000 up front as a subsidy to get two books
published as a requirement for tenure? Somehow I suspect that
the correlation between book purchases by the libraries and
subsidies required for publishing faculty won't be quite so neat
here, but I could be wrong. This system would have the
advantage--as, indeed, OA does in journal publishing--of putting
the burden for any purchase of a print form of the publication on
the end user as an optional cost. That's the beauty of
print-on-demand. technology for books.
--Sandy Thatcher
Penn State Press