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AAAS and JSTOR issues



It does not seem to have garnered much listserv attention, but I think most liblicense readers are aware of the AAAS decision to withdraw its premier publication, Science magazine, from JSTOR. I was very disappointed with this decision. I recently sent a letter to the chair of AAAS, John Holdren, expressing my concerns and my hope that AAAS would reconsider its decision. A copy of my letter is below in plain and simple (but easily exchanged) ASCII text.

My letter was sent in late August and I have not yet rec'd a response; I don't know if I will.

I would hope that some of you agree with my comments and would find the time to express your concerns to AAAS as well. If any of my language or arguments are useful to you, you are more than welcome to edit or borrow liberally and without attribution.

-- David Carlson, Dean
Library Affairs
SIU Carbondale

---------- text of letter ------------

August 28, 2007

Dr. John Holdren, Chair
Board of Directors
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Kennedy School of Government
Mailbox 53
79 JFK Street
Cambridge, MA 02138-5801

Dear Dr. Holdren:

In your role as Chair of the Board of Directors for the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), I am writing to express my disappointment and disagreement over the recent decision of AAAS to ends it participation in JSTOR with Science. It is a mistaken and regrettable decision that, in my judgment, is counter to the mission and values of AAAS. I urge the Board to conduct some additional review and reconsider the decision. Most of my analysis and comments in this letter are based on the AAAS announcement of the decision. The announcement contains the only access I have to explanation and rationale.

The announcement states that AAAS "conducted a series of comprehensive consultations with our customers and readers around the world." Is there a report on the outcome of these consultations? Based on my experience, I am very hard pressed to believe that your "customers and readers" indicated dissatisfaction with JSTOR and your participation in it. I have met researchers who have been unfamiliar with JSTOR, but I have never met a researcher who had used JSTOR and was anything but effusive in their regard and praise for it.

As Dean, when I talk with teaching faculty and researchers, it is striking to me how many faculty specifically mention their joy in using JSTOR and what an asset it is to them in their research. They identify JSTOR's inter-disciplinary research, deep and continuous backfile coverage, vetted resources of academic quality, and integrity of digital representation as special qualities. Faculty have a number of concerns about the use of electronic resources, such as generally accessible web sites, aggregator databases and other resources, but I have found them united in their opinion on the extraordinary and unique value of JSTOR. Can you provide me with more information about the consultations you conducted and the nature of concerns that were revealed?

Your news release states that a major element of your decision is based on your concern to control your content in the context of a rapidly changing "business environment". I agree: AAAS needs to run an effective and even profitable business operation. I also agree with your identification of the challenges of a business environment "in a constant state of transition [with] dramatic technological and competitive changes." In my judgment, this is an argument for continuing and, indeed, furthering your partnership with JSTOR. As an organization that is barely ten years old, JSTOR was born in this environment. In this brief period of rapid change and transition, JSTOR has become a singular success in the academic/research community. I cannot think of a better, more appropriate partnership than JSTOR for AAAS to manage the challenges of these "dramatic technological and competitive changes."

Your emphasis on content control for this decision is not just the wrong emphasis -- it is in opposition to the mission and values of AAAS. When I connect to the AAAS web site, I find a summation of what AAAS stands for: advancing science, serving society. On the web site, this phrase is in a prominent position, upper left corner, immediately beneath the AAAS logo. It is so important that I failed to find an AAAS web page in which the phrase and logo were not included. The decision to withdraw from JSTOR is not in the interests of science nor society. Indeed, JSTOR has been an effective vehicle by which science and the AAAS mission of service to society has been advanced.

This justification of content control puzzles me further because your participation in JSTOR is no abdication of control. JSTOR does not control the content and there is no loss of control by your participation.

As partial justification of your decision, your announcement talks about the responsibility to "maintain a complete electronic archive and to fully integrate that historical content with our very latest published materials." The content of Science, past and current, is a tremendous value and resource. However, this focus on your content and integration is misguided. The single-minded approach eliminates the inestimable value that occurs when Science is integrated and combined with the knowledge and insights of other disciplines and scholarly inquiry. JSTOR provides AAAS with a responsible and controlled means of extending the reach of your content into disciplines that might not encounter it otherwise. With this decision, you lose this unique and powerful tool of integration which JSTOR so elegantly and effectively provides. Moreover, you could integrate your current content with historical content and still maintain your participation in JSTOR. I am confident that JSTOR would be very interested to work with you on closer integration with their database and your other content. Did you explore such possibilities with them?

JSTOR and Science are both strategic resources of great value to the academic/research community. JSTOR has achieved this status in a little more than a decade in an environment of technological and competitive change. Science has achieved its strategic value differently based on its commitment to science, exceptional content, and long history. When these two vital organizations cooperate in their assets and services, the combination is powerful. The participation of Science made a unique and irreplaceable contribution to the resources and cross-disciplinary value of JSTOR. Your decision to withdraw has diminished the contribution of Science to society, the academy, and the community of scholars; tragically, it has also diminished the value of JSTOR. I have every confidence that JSTOR's success will continue and the organization will thrive but the removal of participation by Science is nonetheless a strategic loss which hurts both organizations.

The AAAS decision to end the participation of Science in JSTOR is in contradiction with your mission and values: to advance science and serve society. Moreover, I believe that the reasons given for the decision can be effectively achieved through your continuation with JSTOR. I hope you and the AAAS Board reconsider the withdrawal decision.

Please consider this an open letter to you about my concerns. I am not anxious for our discussion of these important issues to be a public matter. I am much more interested in a sincere reconsideration of your decision than a vitriolic public debate. At the same time, your decision and announcement are public matters, AAAS is a membership organization, and I believe there are many individuals who would be concerned about the perspectives I have suggested in this letter. Beyond those selected individuals copied below, I want you to be aware that I may be distributing this letter to other individuals and groups with similar concerns.

Sincerely,


David Carlson, Dean
Library Affairs

cc: Dr. John Koropchak, Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate
Dean, SIU Carbondale
Dr. Alan I. Leshner, Chief Executive Officer, AAAS
Dr. Jay C. Means, Dean, College of Science, SIU Carbondale