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Quality clauses, or diminishing quality of non-OA
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Quality clauses, or diminishing quality of non-OA
- From: OA Librarian Heather <heatherm@eln.bc.ca>
- Date: Sun, 22 Jan 2006 20:52:47 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Perhaps it is a little early in the transition for this question, but I'm wondering whether anyone besides me is beginning to get a little worried about the inevitable diminshing quality of the determinedly non-OA journals? Once researchers fully understand just how much funding agencies appreciate the broadest possible dissemination of results, which comes with OA, it seems obvious that the vast majority will prefer to publish in fully OA or full-self-archiving rights journals. After all - all else being equal, those who are seeking research funding, are more than happy to make a small adjustment to accomodate those who allocate the funding, right? When these researchers consider the full OA of PLoS, BioMedCentral, Hindawi, etc., or the flexibility of publishers like PNAS, Oxford, and Blackwell's, and compare these with non-OA-friendly journal policies, will the savvy researcher not seek to publish in the manner that will please the funder? If the researchers who tend to seek and receive the significant funding are publishing in these venues - what will happen to the quality of the determinedly anti-OA journal? My expectation is that quality will decrease. For journals of low quality, this could also mean a loss in quantity, which many libraries will have already covered in licensing agreements. For journals which currently have high rejection rates, however, this could mean a loss in quality, which could be made up through lowering quality (i.e. accepting papers which would previously have been rejected). A library with a long-term agreement could be stuck paying premium prices for journals with decreasing quality. If anyone has given some thought to this and/or has contract language to address this issue, I would appreciate hearing from you. Responses on or off list are welcome. If warranted, I would be happy to prepare a summary for the list, for posting to the list or on own of my blogs, depending on length. Speaking of my blogs, I am working on series of articles about OA Librarian warriors. Naturally, I will be including a few Liblicensers: David Goodman would have been first on the list, of course, if he weren't already so very well known. Then there is our very own moderator, who has been providing us with this excellent open forum for so many years, not to mention sharing her own work freely on her web site long before the rest of us had ever heard of self-archiving. If you know of any librarians who deserve to be recognised, or have some time to help with these series, please let me know! Heather G. Morrison Heather's E-LIS: http://eprints.rclis.org/view/people/Morrison,_Heather.html http://oalibrarian.blogspot.com
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