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Re: Harvard OA in NYTimes



My response to Robert Darnton follows:

Hi, Bob! I see you are quoted in this article as favoring Harvard's move toward open access. It will be interesting to see if the faculty buy into this. Here is what I told my staff this morning:

At 9:48 AM -0500 2/12/08, Sandy Thatcher wrote:

The assumption, of course, is faulty because it is NOT journals in the humanities that are wrecking the budgets of libraries. If humanists take this tack and post their articles online before they are even peer reviewed and accepted for publication, the policies of many journals will prevent them from being published at all--which will ill serve the ambitions of junior Harvard faculty to gain tenure. Oops, I forgot: almost no junior faculty at Harvard get tenure there anyway! But if they want to get tenure elsewhere,...
Many journal publishers these days, including us, allow authors--AFTER their articles are accepted for publication--to post them on their own or institutional web sites in their post-peer review but pre-final publication form. But I think many publishers will be wary of accepting for review articles that have already been mass-circulated in this way. Why fill their pages with already "published" articles? And these articles, as not yet peer reviewed, will not count for tenure and promotion anyway, unless that system changes in significant ways. ( I do understand that some senior economists have decided to bypass journals in their field and are "publishing" via the web without peer review, but they are already tenured and don't have to worry about career advancement anymore; their main aim is to get their ideas circulating more quickly, and their reputations alone can attract readers to their sites.)

If this practice were to become widespread, it would ultimately undercut Project Muse, the largest aggregated database of e-journals in the humanities and social sciences (with 400+ journals). Since our journals program now receives two thirds of its income from Project Muse, all of our journals, except the few that are membership-based, would go under. They include such leading journals as Chaucer Review, Comparative Literature Studies, Philosophy & Rhetoric, and the Journal of Policy History. How would that help anybody? And what would replace them as validators of peer review?

Open access is a complicated issue, and university presses are supportive of it--to a degree. I attach an article I wrote about it in Learned Publishing, which represents a more elaborate statement than the "official" AAUP position that I drafted.

Sanford G. Thatcher, Director
Penn State University Press
University Park, PA 16802-1003
e-mail: sgt3@psu.edu
http://www.psupress.org