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Re: Institutional Mandates and Institutional OA Repository Growth



On Thu, 27 Sep 2007, Sandy Thatcher wrote:

I wish I could share your optimism, Stevan, but we just published a book about Rutgers (by an English professor there) that shows that the Rutgers administration, pressured by the sports boosters on its board of trustees, are quite happy to spend lots of money on upgrading the football stadium and ensuring that the team will rank in the top ten while the academic infrastructure of the school, including classrooms, literally crumbles into disrepair. Is this "rational"? Not to my mind, but it is happening in many places these days. "A lot of e-mails and phone calls" from not only their faculty but students and alumni as well have had no effect on the university's determination to sacrifice its academic reputation at the altar of big-time sports-so much for faculty power and the "dead-obvious solution" to the university's $34 million budget deficit.
(1) Sandy is of course right about these occasional (or frequent) egregious failures in judgment on the part of some universities.

(2) But if there were a general rule here, then Rutgers should *already* have diverted its library journal budget toward alleviating its budget deficits.

(3) Research, like football, is a source of revenue for universities, generating research funding, attracting students and faculty, and inspiring alumni giving.

(4) So if universities with big budget deficits do not deem it desirable to cancel journals and divert those savings toward lessening their deficits today, when journals cost money and research is published for free, it is not at all obvious that they would deem it desirable to divert the (hypothetical) savings from the (hypothetical) cancellations generated (hypothetically) by 100% Green OA self-archiving, at a (hypothetical) time when publication charges would replace subscriptions.

(5) On the other hand, universities with or without budget deficits might be able to appreciate the (hypothetical) contingency that they would have to pay a lot less for publishing their own peer-reviewed research output than they are now paying for buying in one another's peer-reviewed research output, once it was all being self-archived in each university's own institutional repository, free for all, with journals only needing to charge for managing the service of peer review.

(6) If the actual evidence of enhanced research usage and impact generated by self-archiving their own research is not enough to inspire researchers today to self-archive, and to inspire their institutions (and funders) to mandate that they self-archive, perhaps this added hypothetical prospect -- of overall net savings from the hypothetical transition from subscription fees to Gold OA fees -- will.

But now lets put an end to speculation and second-guessing about what universities *would* do with the money, *if* -- and return to what they can and should do (and are already beginning to do, with success), at no expense, now: mandate Green OA self-archiving, and reap the benefits in terms of enhanced research impact.

Stevan Harnad