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Re: Open access and publishing software
The survey and analysis I am familiar with is described at
<http://www.alpsp.org/ngen_public/article.asp?id=200&did=47&aid=274&st=&oaid=-1>
It is by Mark Ware and published by ALPSP.
This describes the most used systems and refers to some of the
others.
How does Heather know that there are 800 journals using the
software she recommends if she does not know which ones they are?
Anthony
----- Original Message -----
From: "Heather Morrison" <heatherm@eln.bc.ca>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2007 1:54 AM
Subject: Open access and publishing software
Redirected from: Misperceptions clarified.
Open Journal Systems is an open source publishing software,
used by about 800 journals, around the world, primarily but not
exclusively for open access publishing. There are many OJS
hosting services; some, like Scholarly Exchange, are open to
providing services on a fee-for-service basis, while others are
designed to meet local needs.
Because these journals are on a variety of hosts, there is no
central list. This makes sense - OJS is just the software;
there is no central list of all documents created using
Microsoft Word, or Open Document Format, either.
There are many other publishing platforms which automate a
great deal of the work of publishing. Some are open source,
others are proprietary.
There are open access publishers employing an article
processing fee business model who have very reasonable prices,
although they use a different software than OJS. To find out
exactly why, you would have to ask each publisher about their
own decisions. OJS has only been around for a few years, so
open access publishers who started early on likely have
developed their own software.
One example of OA publishers with low article processing fees
is Hindawi (who use their own publishing software, not OJS),
already reporting profits at fees of about $500 US per article,
and the for- profit BioMedCentral (also locally developed
software).
My experience of Open Journal Systems is primarily as an
Editor, Theory / Research for Partnership: the Canadian Journal
of Library and Information Practice and Research, an open
access journal, at:
<http://journal.lib.uoguelph.ca/index.php/perj/>
I'm impressed! It is easy to see how OJS greatly simplifies
the work of an Editor. I can easily track all the articles in
my area from submission until completion of my portion of the
work. There is ready access to contact information for our pool
of peer reviewers and authors of works in process (one click to
assign a peer reviewer, a second click to initiate an e-mail
message). Deadline dates are automatically tracked; I can see
at a glance what is coming up soon, if a review is overdue,
etc. Automated messages are available, but are flexible so
that editors can add a personal touch if they like. Editorial
decisions can be recorded using a drop-down menu. I can access
my editorial workspace from anywhere with an internet
connection, making it easy to keep up. The tracking features
alone convince me that OJS is scalable far beyond my human
limitations for editorial work.
More information about Open Journal Systems can be found at:
<http://pkp.sfu.ca/?q=ojs>
Any opinion expressed in this message is mine alone, and does
not reflect the opinion or policy of BC Electronic Library
Network, Simon Fraser University Library, or Partnership: the
Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and
Research.
Heather Morrison
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com