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Re: Publish-or-Perish Mandates and Self-Archiving Mandates
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Publish-or-Perish Mandates and Self-Archiving Mandates
- From: Sandy Thatcher <sgt3@psu.edu>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jun 2007 02:19:22 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
I think you are overestimating the extent to which there is any centralized knowledge of what scholars in a university actually produce. To create such centralized knowledge, and hence facilitate the deposit by some other entity than the author of the scholarly output of a faculty, would in itself be a huge task.
Dear Sandy
I stated earlier that authors can not be made responsible for any post-manuscript writing activities. Publishing is a different sort of activity, so is its dissemination. If authors are supposed to do the librarian's job or that of the university press, then there is no need of the existence of these institutions. Self-archiving anyway does not mean that authors themselves have to deposit their publications in IR and in a "legally mandated" environment "ideally" there should be an office responsible for this activity. This could be university registrar, librarian, office of scholarly communications or something else. But in a university, the numbers of potential authors could range from few hundreds to several thousands and it is the only these offices which will have exact details of the activities of the authors in a university. The notion that authors will deposit their publication by their own hand stems from an activist's effort of OA populisation, not from the realization of how universities work in a large framework of interconnected departments and offices.
Atanu Garai
Globethics.net
From: Sandy Thatcher
Subject: Re: Publish-or-Perish Mandates and Self-Archiving Mandates
What surprises me here is that there is only 95% compliance. For any mandatory ETD program like the one that exists at Penn State now (http://www.etd.psu.edu), a graduate student cannot graduate without depositing the thesis in electronic form. One wonders why there is less than 100% compliance under these circumstances.
This kind of mandatory policy, of course, has teeth that others do not. What is the penalty for a faculty member who ignores a university policy to deposit research papers in the university's IR?
Until "mandatory" means something more than "strongly suggest" and has serious consequences for noncompliance, I suspect that the uptake will fall far short of Stevan's ideal Green OA world.
Sandy Thatcher
Penn State Press
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