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RE: Q 1. on OA
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: RE: Q 1. on OA
- From: "Mcsean, Tony (ELS)" <T.Mcsean@elsevier.com>
- Date: Wed, 21 Jun 2006 21:37:46 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I'd like to support Joe by quoting George Bernard Shaw's dictum that professions are either a group of people gathered together in the name of progress or a conspiracy against society. In my personal experience medical and LIS professional associations are mostly a sticky mixture of both. The British Medical Association is fiercely committed to the principle of sustaining self-regulation within the medical profession and worked tirelessly to support this in the wake of the major scandals of the Shipman serial killings and the scandal of the Bristol Royal Infirmary's paediatric cardiac unit. As a registered trade union the BMA is perfectly entitled to defend what it's members see as their own best interests, and indeed many people for whom I have great respect hold that self-regulation is best because the regulators understand fully the issues. Every professional association I have been inside has regarded political lobbying (in the broad and narrow sense) as an important part of its core activity. It is often (?always) regarded as doubly important because its "public good" elements will give members a warm feeling about how their subs are being spent, and it will reinforce the organisations moral strength when what the BMA tends to call pay and rations issues come under discussion. Certainly in my time as director, the BMA's sizeable library service came into this category. Professional membership organisations are by their nature complex, hydra-headed entities. They are a mixture of self-interest, members' interest and public interest and the balance will shift (sometimes spectacularly) over time. UK medical colleges typically lean heavily on income from publishing and examination fees in order to accomplish what the members see as their essential profesional role, and the UK's national LIS association, (CILIP, whose council I currently chair) covers only one third of its annual expenditure from members' subscriptions. To conclude, like Joe I recognise that societies are free to do anything that the law, their charter and their finances allow. But also like Joe, I would counsel everyone to bear in mind that not all their activities and goals are entirely selfless. Tony Tony McSean Director of Library Relations Elsevier 84 Theobald's Road London WC1X 8RR +44 7795 960516 +44 20 76114413 -----Original Message----- [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Joseph Esposito Sent: 21 June 2006 00:15 To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: Re: Q 1. on OA Peter: I am not going to focus on the word "typically," which covers a multitude of sins, but I think you are on shakey ground here. Dollars are fungible; what comes in from publishing can be spent on lobbying for (or against) Medicare benefits, environmental regulations, and so forth. Professional societies have their interests, as they should, and they are not neccessarily of the "for the greater good" variety. I am personally not troubled by this at all, nor do I think getting all the facts out, warts and all, undermines your very strong argument. Professional societies have a right to charge for their publications and use that money in any lawful way they see fit. That does not mean that everyone would continue to purchase the publications if the various ways the revenue got redistributed and spent were disclosed. If the academy can impose embargoes on Israel and the Sudan, why not a professional society or two? Indeed, I am truly amazed that the OA advocates have not pursued this route already. Joe Esposito On 6/19/06, Peter Banks <pbanks@bankspub.com> wrote: > > The advocacy in which associations engage is not typically of > the "Abramoff" variety. It is usually for causes that do > benefit science and medicine--for example, increasing the > budget of NIH, expanding health coverage from Americans, or > supporting stem cell research. > > On 6/19/06 7:43 PM, "Joseph Esposito" <espositoj@gmail.com> wrote: > >> In fairness one should add at least one item to Peter's list of >> investments on the part of professional societies: political >> lobbying. Few do this, but it is not something that can comfortably >> be covered by the phrase "other activities that benefit science and >> medicine." >> >> Joe Esposito
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