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Re: EPrints, DSpace or ESpace?
- To: SPARC Open Access Forum <SPARC-OAForum@arl.org>
- Subject: Re: EPrints, DSpace or ESpace?
- From: Stevan Harnad <harnad@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2003 18:13:13 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
On Sun, 9 Nov 2003, Neil Beagrie wrote: > the final version of the report by Maggie Jones from the e-journal > archiving study is now available in pdf on the jisc website at > > http://www.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_documents/ejournalsfinal.pdf This report has useful information for those who are interested in licensed toll-access journal content and in the preservation (archiving) of such licensed content, but it unfortunately misunderstands the relation between the archiving concerns for such licensed (i.e., bought-in) toll-access content and the concerns and purposes of the self-archiving of researchers' own institutional research output (mostly also published in toll-access journals). The report is right that this is a *parallel* form of archiving, but it is in error about what is actually paralleling what! The relevant passages are: > "E-Print Repositories: The rapid escalation of e-print repositories has > been regarded by some of its champions as a potential replacement > for more traditional scholarly communication provided by licensed > e-journals." All kinds of things have no doubt been said by all kinds of champions and challengers, but the standpoint of the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI) on self-archiving is quite clear: Self-archiving in eprint archives is an alternative way of providing access -- *open access* -- to the *very same articles*, i.e., the articles that authors have published in toll-access journals. Hence eprint archives are not *replacements* (substitutes) for the journals but *supplements* to them, intended to allow authors to provide access to their articles for all those would-be users whose institutions cannot afford the tolls for the toll-access version. http://www.soros.org/openaccess/read.shtml http://www.eprints.org/self-faq/ > "The emphasis to date has been on encouraging scholars to > deposit content into the archives, rather than on preservation > requirements. Indeed some proponents of e-print repositories argue > against considering preservation requirements at this stage as being > largely irrelevant for the time being and something which can be > considered later (if at all)." Once it is at last understood that the self-archived versions in the eprint archives are supplements to rather than substitutes for the toll-access versions, it will perhaps also be at last understood that the primary preservation burden is not on those supplements, self-provided only to maximise access and impact. The primary preservation burden is on the proprietary toll-access versions. Those are the ones that publishers sell and those are the ones that libraries buy; and as long as that buying and selling goes on, those are also the parties responsible for the permanence of the proprietary product, *not* the authors (and their institutions), who are only providing a supplementary version in order to provide access for those would-be users who cannot afford the proprietary version. Yes, the self-archivers are interested in providing open-access to their work not only today, but tomorrow, and after-tomorrow. And they are doing so. The work self-archived in the Physics Arxiv in 1991, for example, is still alive and well, fully useable and used, in 2003, thank you very much, and was even successfully retro-fitted for OAI-compliance in 1999. And all this self-archived work will continue to be kept openly accessible by researchers and their institutions. And some day, possibly, if and when the access-tolls are no longer being paid at all, and all archiving is offloaded on the network of OAI-compliant eprint archives, *then* the eprint archives can take over the primary burden of archiving too. But for now, they are only a parallel form of *access-provision* to the very same literature, and they are not the ones that have, or should worry about, the primary preservation burden. Nor are they alternatives to the journals; they are just alternative forms of access. If/when the "golden" option prevails, and all journals convert to open-access, covering costs from author/institution submission fees, per paper, instead of reader/institution toll-access fees, per journal, then these archives will be poised to assume the preservation burden. But at no time will this mean that eprint archives "replace" journals: It merely means that open-access journals will become essentially peer-review service providers and certifiers rather than the providers of a paper or online text. Short form: Access-provision will be come unbundled from publication (for the refereed research literature). Publication will mean have been accepted as meeting the established peer-review quality standards of a journals. Authors provide the research and the text. The journal provides the peer-review (and editing) service. And the network of OAI-interoperable institutional eprint archives provide the access. > "As these repositories will be expected to contain valuable scholarly > resources, it is to be hoped that their preservation will be taken > into consideration and a related JISC funded study is currently > investigating this [24]." It is no doubt the needless proliferation of synonyms, near-synonyms, and euphemisms that keeps us so confused about the purposes of eprint archives. Can I propose that we reserve the term "institutional repository" for all the *other* things an institution may wish to archive, manage and preserve: bought-in toll-access digital content, institutional input *other* than peer-reviewed articles (pre- and post-peer-review), such as courseware, etc., and any e-publishing ventures institutions may be contemplating to increase their revenue streams. That way we can reserve "eprint archives" for the specific content targeted by the BOAI, namely, institutional refereed-research output, self-archived in order to maximize its impact by maximizing access to it. http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Temp/self-archiving_files/Slide0045.gif > "In the meantime, the immediate concern of libraries is whether they > can rely on continued access to material they have paid for through > licences. While there will be overlapping issues to be addressed in > preserving licensed e-journals and e-prints, at this stage they need > to be considered separately. The development of e-print repositories > should be watched with interest and offer the potential for more > rapid access to scholarly research. However, this study recommends > they should not be regarded as a complete substitute for licensed > e-journals but as a parallel development." As long as the *nature* of this parallelism is clearly understood, the above seems like a very reasonable recommendation! Stevan Harnad
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