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RE: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment
- From: "William Walters" <William.Walters@millersville.edu>
- Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 17:37:50 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I am grateful to Heather Morrison for taking the time to comment on my paper. I should mention that I have no opinion whatsoever on whether it's fair for the largest research universities to pay a higher proportion of the total system-wide journal cost. I also have no idea whether they're able to pay that cost. I've tried to keep my paper as scrupulously objective as possible, and to avoid (in the paper) any conclusions not based on the evidence presented there. My results show how costs would be distributed in an environment in which all journals are Open Access (freely available to everyone at the time of publication) and all journals charge publication fees rather than subscription fees. I realize that those assumptions are perhaps unrealistic, and that several types of conventional, Open Access, and hybrid models are likely to coexist. At the same time, however, I think it's valuable to show the cost implications of a "pure" Open Access environment. The ALPSP study adopts a broad definition of Open Access journals, including (for example) those that provide free online access only after an embargo period. It also includes many Open Access journals put out by publishers who also publish conventional journals -- publishers who have other sources of income that can be used to subsidize their Open Access projects. Personally, I am skeptical of the idea that external funding agencies will be able or willing to subsidize Open Access journals on a large scale over an extended period of time. After all, those same funding agencies could just as easily subsidize libraries' conventional subscriptions right now. I hope they will be able to support Open Access, but I'm not convinced that the necessary funds are available or that funding agencies will be willing to use them for that purpose. (This is not something I address in my paper, so I have no evidence, either way.) Heather Morrison mentions that my paper does not "take into account the possibility of open access business models that would level the playing field for the research producers." I agree with her statement, since my study was never intended to investigate scenarios other than the two Open Access models that I describe in my paper. I am likely to be skeptical, however, until I see more than a possibility that a particular business model will work. Is Open Access publishing sustainable in the long run? I worry that it's not, but I really don't know. In my view, the question will be answered not by opinion, rhetoric, or even good reasoning, but by evidence. William H. Walters, PhD Assistant Professor of Librarianship Collection Development Librarian Helen A. Ganser Library Millersville University Millersville, PA 17551-0302 (717) 871-2063 ___________________________ From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu on behalf of Heather Morrison Sent: Wed 04/26/06 6:37 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Institutional Journal Costs in an Open Access Environment Some reflection on Bill Walters' Study as reported in Liblicense at: http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/ListArchives/0604/msg00106.html First, a quote from Walters: "the PLoS Open Access Model would bring dramatic cost reductions for all nine institutions in the sample". One of the points which I see Walters and Phil Davis trying to make, it that an open access model paid for entirely by the researcher's library, would change the proportion of the total costs of scholarly communications. That is, even if a PLoS-style model were completely affordable and cost-efficient for all libraries, the largest research producers would pay a disproportionate share of the cost. There are two problems with this argument, in my view. First, it seems that we are assuming that it would not be fair for universities with intensive research production to pay a higher share of the costs of scholarly communication. Why shouldn't they pay more, though? Can we not assume that the research intensive university receives a higher portion of research funding than the less-research-intensive university? This strikes me as similar to arguments about FTE. When purchasing electronic resources, pricing that is based on (or taking into account) FTE numbers is quite common. This means larger institutions pay more. Is this unfair? The larger institutions do receive more funding from tuition, and likely other sources, right? In other words, it would be fair for those who can afford to do the research to pay more of the costs of scholarly communications, just as it is perfectly fair for those with the largest user groups to pay more for electronic resources. Second, useful as Walters' data and analysis are, there is still important data not yet taken into account. As Peter Suber talks about this on Open Access News. We haven't taken into account some fairly important variables - such as the fact uncovered in the ALPSP study, The Facts about Open Access, that less than half of open access journals have processing fees. Or that some funding agencies are providing funds for processing fees. Nor does this take into account the possibility of open access business models that would level the playing field for the research producers - such as providing provincial or state funding for production, much as many currently use such funding for group purchasing. Add in a little efficiency, from the automated processing made possible by the current generation of software such as the open source Open Journal Systems, and a higher proportion of journals produced by faculty themselves, and it is not at all hard to see how we can have a scholarly communications system that is not only a very great deal more accessible - but also more affordable, too. chrs, Heather G. Morrison E-LIS Editor, Canada http://eprints.rclis.org/
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