[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
On OA, Self-Interest and Coercion
On Thu, 24 Jan 2008, James J. O'Donnell wrote:
...Whether to include [books] in OA "mandates" is Stevan
Harnad's question, and since I regard such mandates with
skepticism, that question doesn't concern me.
But the question of mandates does concern a bigger and bigger
constituency, now that 6 of 7 UK Research Councils, the European
Research Council, the US National Institutes of Health, and a
growing number of universities worldwide have already mandated OA
self-archiving, and the vast sleeping giant of universities
worldwide is about to awaken and follow suit:
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/356-guid.html
22 funder mandates,
12 institutional mandates,
3 departmental mandates,
plus
5 proposed funder mandates,
3 proposed multi-institutional mandates,
1 proposed institutional mandate
That's a total of
37 mandates already adopted and
9 more proposed so far
= 46
http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/
So this might be an opportune time to re-examine the basis of
one's skepticism about OA mandates...
I am struck by the assertion that "all authors would want OA
for their articles" if certain conditions are met. That's an
interesting hypothesis, but I would simply underscore that the
number of authors who currently *do* want OA for their articles
is low enough that Harnad and others recommend they be coerced
to achieve the goal. That fundamental disjuncture is important
to understand and is advanced by empirical work, not by thought
experiments.
(1) "Coerced" is a rather shrill term! (Is every rule that is in
the public interest -- smoking bans? seatbelt laws? breathalyzer
tests? taxes? -- coercion? Is academia's "publish or perish"
mandate "coercion"?)
http://www.ercim.org/publication/Ercim_News/enw64/harnad.html
(2) It is empirically incorrect to assume that the number of
authors that do want OA for their articles is the same as the
number who spontaneously self-archive or publish in an OA journal
today:
(3) Considerable empirical work has been done on these questions:
The surveys by Alma Swan and others have repeatedly shown that
(a) many authors still don't know about OA, and (b) many of those
who know about it agree that they would want it for their
articles, but they fear (wrongly) that it might be illegal,
prejudicial to their publishing in their journal of choice, or
just plain too complicated and time-consuming to do it.
(4) As a matter of empirical fact, (a) - (c) are all wrong.
(5) More important, the surveys have found that although most
authors still do not self-archive, 95% report that they would
self-archive if their institutions and/or funders mandated it --
and 81% of them report they would do so *willingly*.
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/337-guid.html
(6) In other words, most authors regard Green OA self-archiving
mandates not as coercion, but as facilitation, for doing what
they would want to do, but otherwise daren't (or otherwise could
not assign it the proper priority in their academic
publish-or-perish obligations).
(7) By way of still further empirical confirmation, Arthur Sale's
many studies have shown that institutional self-archiving
policies are successful -- and institutional OA repositories
successfully approach capture of 100% of institutional research
output -- if and only if they are mandates.
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/337-guid.html
(8) All of that is empirical; there is one thought-experiment,
however, and that is the various speculations and
counter-speculations about whether or not Green OA self-archiving
mandates will destroy peer-reviewed journal publication (see
APPENDIX below).
(9) I fully agree that the only way to settle that question too,
is empirically -- and the mandates will do just that.
(10) All indications are that if and when mandated Green OA
should ever make the journal subscription model unsustainable,
the only thing that will happen is a natural transition to Gold
OA publishing, with (a portion of) the institutional subscription
savings simply redirected to paying the (reduced but nonzero)
costs of Gold OA: implementing peer review.
http://www.scoap3.org/
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmsctech/399/399we152.htm
APPENDIX:
Would all peer-reviewed journal article authors indeed want OA
for their published articles if they knew copyright was no
obstacle and knew that self-archiving time/effort was trivial?
As noted above, I think we already know the answer to that
question, indirectly, from the multidisciplinary surveys that
have already been conducted and published. But suppose we wanted
a still more direct answer:
Suppose we were to ask authors -- only about peer-reviewed
journal articles (not books, irrespective of whether books are
peer-reviewed) -- the following question (which needs to be as
detailed as it is, in order to short-circuit irrelevancies,
enthymemes, and incorrect assumptions):
"IF there existed no legal or practical copyright obstacles to doing
it, and IF doing it involved negligibly little time and effort on
your part (< 5 minutes of keystrokes per paper over and above all
the time it took to write it), THEN would you be FOR or AGAINST
making your own published journal articles Open Access so that all
their potential users could access them, rather than just those
whose institutions that could afford paid access to the journal in
which your article happened to be published?"
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/71-guid.html
http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/10688/
I am willing to wager that the vast majority of authors in all
disciplines would reply FOR (and that if we added a box "if
AGAINST, please state WHY," the reasons given by the minority who
were AGAINST would all, without exception, be either factually
incorrect, logically incoherent, or simply irrelevant).
That, I think, is the only real issue (especially given that a
huge wave of institutional and funder self-archiving mandates is
now growing worldwide: See Peter Suber's forthcoming SPARC
Newsletter for January 2008).
Some critics of OA mandates still seem to be seeing the
self-archiving and the self-archiving mandate question as somehow
imperiling the publication of articles in the author's
peer-reviewed journal of choice: But articles published in the
author's chosen peer-reviewed journal were part of the
conditional (IF/THEN) in the above conditional question.
Hence any remaining reluctance about self-archiving can only be
based on speculations ("thought experiments") about the future of
journal publishing; those speculations would go into the "WHY"
box, and then each one (they are all well-known by now!) could
easily be shown to be groundless, empirically and logically:
(1) Self-archiving would bypass peer review. (Incorrect: The
premise of the question had been that you deposit your published,
peer-reviewed journal articles.)
http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/self-faq/#7.Peer
(2) Self-archiving would jeopardize my chances of publishing
in some journals, because they don't allow it. (Incorrect:
(i) The premise of the question had been that there were no
copyright obstacles. (ii) 91% of journals already endorse
immediate self-archiving (for either unrefereed preprint,
refereed postprint [62%], or both); for the 38% of postprints,
the access can be embargoed and the IR's semi-automatic "email
eprint request" button will provide almost-immediate OA to all
eprint requesters during the embargo.)
http://romeo.eprints.org/stats.php
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/274-guid.html
(3) Self-archiving would jeopardize the survival of peer-reviewed
journal publishing. (Un-empirical speculation: (i) There is no
evidence to date that self-archiving reduces journal revenue,
even in the fields where it has reached 100% years ago. (ii)
Counterspeculation: If/when self-archiving made the
subscription-based cost-recovery model unsustainable,
peer-reviewed journal publishing would simply switch to the Gold
OA journal publishing model, with institutions paying for their
authors' publication costs out of (part of) exactly the same
money they are currently using to pay journal subscription costs.
http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/self-faq/#17.Publishers
http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/11160/
Stevan Harnad