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Re: potential positive spiral in transition to open access
I would be interested in learning what them STM Ghetto is, why
titles will survive in it and what is the difference between the
ghetto and the real world.
Anthony Watkinson
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jan Szczepanski" <jan.szczepanski@ub.gu.se>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Saturday, June 30, 2007 4:24 AM
Subject: Re: potential positive spiral in transition to open access
Spasmodically or not there are other ways to look at free
e-journals.
First: there are a world outside STM and peer reviewed
journals. The world's largest collection of free e-journals can
be found at Elektronische Zeitschriften- bibliothek (EZB) or in
English Electronic Journals Library
http://rzblx1.uni-regensburg.de/ezeit/about.phtml?bibid=3DAAAAA&colors=3D7&=
lang=3Den
At the end of 2006 EZB had registred 13.071 open access
journals. That figure was in 2001, 2.312 green titles. About
600% more.
During the same time period the red titles have expanded from
8.184 to 16.059. About 100%. This is an indication that the
positive spiral is more postive towards open access.
In 2001 EZB had 78% red titles and 22% green ones. In 2006 56%
red titles and 44% green.
Of course You will find even more spasmodical journals in EZB
but the bigger picture is that green titles are growing faster
and will within ten years be the way people expects a journal
to be. Red titles will of course survive within the commercial
STM-ghetto but not outside, in the real world.
All figures are taken from the EZB Jahresbericht from 2006.
http://rzblx1.uni-regensburg.de/ezeit/anwender/Jahresbericht_EZB_2006.pdf
Jan Szczepanski
Goteborgs universitetsbibliotek
Box 222
SE 405 30 Goteborg, SWEDEN
Tel: +46 31 773 1164 Fax: +46 31 163797
E-mail: Jan.Szczepanski@ub.gu.se