Source: https://www.chronicle.com/interactives/Trend19-OpenAccess-Main
A Turning Point for Scholarly Publishing
Debate over the
future of scholarly publishing felt remote to Kathryn M. Jones, an
associate professor of biology at Florida State University — that is,
until she attended a Faculty Senate meeting last year.
There she learned that the library might
renegotiate its $2-million subscription with the publishing behemoth
Elsevier, which would limit her and her colleagues’ access to
groundbreaking research. Horror sank in. Like other experimental
scientists, Jones regularly skims articles published in subscription
journals to plan future experiments. What would happen if she couldn’t
access that body of important work with the click of a button?
Though initiatives to make published
research more freely available have for years poked at the publishing
industry’s armor, these efforts — known as the open-access movement —
have not toppled the norms of how academic work is distributed and read.
Titans like Elsevier, Springer Nature, and Wiley own troves of journals
that enjoy immense respect in academe. In the dominant system, a person
can read newly published research in one of two ways: pay a one-time
fee to obtain an article locked behind a paywall, or get it through a
campus library, which may pay millions of dollars for subscriptions.
That may soon change. Smaller-scale efforts
are mixing with top-down decisions — through universities’ subscription
negotiations and a major European plan that mandates open-access
publication for certain research — to put unusual pressure on
publishers.
Don’t think these battles are confined to
the library or an individual discipline. The changes have the potential
to alter nearly everything about how research is disseminated — and
therefore how departments spend money, researchers collaborate, and
faculty careers advance.
“There is reason to believe we are at a true
tipping point in transforming this industry,” says Jeffrey K.
MacKie-Mason, university librarian at the University of California at
Berkeley, who helped lead that university system’s negotiations with
Elsevier. “We are getting enough alignment and actual action on the part
of providers of research and readers of research to change the
intermediary — the publishing industry.”
It won’t be easy in a landscape still
dominated by subscription publishing. One major challenge will be
incorporating open-access principles into the existing work culture of
faculty members and researchers, who have a huge incentive to publish in
known subscription journals because of their prestige. Some worry about
other unintended consequences.
The European plan “changed the conversation quite substantially.”
Despite her qualms, Jones supported Florida
State’s desire to reduce costs through negotiations. Her mother was a
public-school librarian, and Jones knew budgets were tight. She even
publishes many of her own articles under an open-access model.
After doing some research, she learned that
other universities were also renegotiating big packages. If that’s the
trend, she thought, maybe we are just stupid to keep paying at this
rate.
Florida State decided to halve the cost of
its Elsevier contract, paying about $1 million to subscribe to the 150
most-used journals, as identified by faculty members, instead of the
more than 1,800 journals they could read as part of the bundle.
Budgetary strain was the prime cause, but in announcing the decision,
the library also noted its broader support for the open-access movement.
The Faculty Senate supported the libraries unanimously.
So Jones searched for keywords — including
"bacterial exopolysaccharide" and “rhizobium” — in the journals that
didn’t make the cut, and then downloaded those issues before access ran
out. The files gobble up space on an external drive, but she says easier
access for the near-term future is worth the burden.
The ideal solution, Jones realized, didn’t exist. “We were just trying to throw as many journals as we could into the lifeboat.”
Complicating any
discussion about open access is that many groups that agree in
principle that research should be free to read disagree with the
particulars of how that should happen. Those tensions emerged in the
fall when a group of major European funding agencies took on the mantle
of change through a new initiative: Plan S.
There are two predominant ways to publish
under an open-access model. “Gold” open access imposes a processing
charge on a researcher, university, or funding agency before an article
is released — but after that, anyone can read that article free of
charge, immediately after publication, and there are looser restrictions
on republication.
Many federal agencies under the Obama
administration started requiring “green” open access for the articles
they funded — in which a version of an article is published in a free
repository in addition to in any subscription journal. That free version
may be subject to a delayed release.
Some open-access supporters say research is
truly open only when all content is freely accessible, with no copyright
restrictions for re-use. Other proponents say certain restrictions are
OK, including limiting commercial use. Article-processing fees covering
formatting, coordinating peer review, and digital housing can be a few
thousand dollars. Some fear that those charges could soar, making
publishing less accessible. (Processing fees are high in more-selective
journals, some publishers say, because it takes effort and time to weed
through articles.)
Under Plan S the research financed by
members of the coalition must be published in compliant open-access
journals by 2020, made accessible without any embargo. The funding
agencies include national research foundations in about a dozen European
countries, in addition to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in
the United States and the Wellcome Trust in Britain.
Collectively, the original signatories
financed more than 20 percent of the scholarly articles published in
their countries in 2017, and 3.3 percent of scholarly articles published
that year worldwide, according to the consulting and advisory firm
Delta Think. More funding agencies have since expressed support,
including in China, according to Robert-Jan Smits, open-access envoy for
the European Commission.
The announcement of Plan S raised cheers —
and questions. To boosters of open-access publishing, it showed that
major foundations had soured on expensive subscription journals and that
large-scale change was on the way.
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“It is only through a concerted and
coordinated approach across national funders that the necessary progress
can be made,” says Carlos Moedas, the European commissioner for
research, science, and innovation, in a statement strongly encouraging other funding bodies to follow suit.
But resistance to the announcement was
swift. Lynn Kamerlin, a professor of structural biology at Sweden’s
Uppsala University, coordinated an open letter against Plan S that more
than 1,600 people signed. She says the top-down mandate made researchers
bristle.
It “threatens to shatter researchers’
trust,” she says. “It’s a worrying moment — the grass roots is where you
need it. The research community should take the lead.”
One concern outlined in the petition was the
risk that individual researchers would see lower international rankings
and standings if they could not publish in top journals.
Charles T. Watkinson, associate university
librarian for publishing at the University of Michigan and director of
the university’s press, thinks about equity when he considers
publication driven by article-processing fees. Academics at small
colleges and in the humanities are less likely to have money from their
institution or their funding agency to cover article-processing charges,
he says. Watkinson serves on the oversight committee of Lever Press, an
open-access book publisher backed by a group of liberal-arts college
libraries.
“How can we support scholars who don’t have funding coming with them?” he asks. “Plan S is driven by very well-funded fields.”
Haakon Gjerløw, a Ph.D. fellow in political
science at the University of Oslo, fears that the plan will isolate him
from researchers in the United States and other countries whose central
funding agencies do not support it. It depends on how the plan is
implemented, guidance for which was collected through early February.
Gjerløw has worked with a social-science project called Varieties of Democracy for
more than three years and has valued collaborating with American
academics. Data collection was paid for by agencies that support Plan S.
He says he would understand if American researchers no longer wanted to
work on a project that had to adhere to strict open-access rules,
potentially limiting any ability to publish in a top journal.
“They do not have any great incentive to
cooperate across the Atlantic,” he says. “It could end up being a waste
of time if you couldn’t get any academic credit out of it.”
Plan S aspires to increase global science
collaboration by making results “widely available without paywall and
delays,” wrote Smits in an email.
“I always thought that scientists were
collaborating at [the] international level to extend in partnership the
frontiers of knowledge, address the grand societal challenges, transfer
knowledge to industry and train the next generation of researchers,” he
said. “If scientists now tell you that they will no longer collaborate
globally if they will not be allowed to publish behind expensive
paywalls, the time might have come for a more fundamental debate of the
role of science in our society.”
“Libraries are under great pressure ... to cut back on the number of materials they collect.”
Smits said that Plan S organizers have heard
from certain fields that not enough open-access outlets exist. The
coalition, he said, is analyzing this gap and has pledged to offer
incentives for the development of new open-access platforms.
It makes sense for the foundations to force
change, he wrote, because “not much progress has been made” in expanding
open access in more than two decades. “Funders are now taking their
responsibility through ‘the power of the purse.’ ”
In 2015, Johan Rooryck felt prepared to resign as editor of the Elsevier-owned linguistics publication Lingua. For
a while, he could convince himself that he worked for the good of his
field, for academe. But looking into Elsevier’s profits made him think
differently about his work. After a high-profile boycott of Elsevier in
2012, academics he respected told him they didn’t want to perform peer
review for Lingua anymore.
He started, very slowly, to feel like a bad guy. They’re holding all the strings, he thought to himself.
He and his editorial colleagues decided to
resign. Their goal was to orchestrate a so-called “flip” of the journal —
a transfer of the leadership team that edited Lingua to a new open-access publication.
Because the publication had the same
editorial team, he expected it would not confront questions of quality
that plagued other open-access journals.
Rooryck reeled in half a million euros from
the Association of Dutch Universities and other groups and devised a
longer-term solution, in which the nonprofit Open Library for the
Humanities would pay processing fees of individual articles — and try to
spread the practice of “flipping” to others.
TAKEAWAYS:
- Bottom-up efforts and top-down decrees make this a major turning point for open-access publishing.
- Some large library systems are pursuing new types of subscription packages with publishers. Negotiators want one package that would cover subscription charges and open-access publishing fees.
- National research foundations in about a dozen European countries have joined a coalition that would force the academics they fund to publish their research under an open-access model. Comments on implementation were due in February.
- One challenge: Departments largely do not consider open-access publication in their promotion-and-tenure decisions.
The editors sent a letter to Elsevier that announced their resignation and started a new open-access publication called Glossa. They had the support of writers and reviewers, some of whom withdrew their articles from Lingua and submitted them to Glossa for
publication. And he heard from readers as far away as Indonesia and
South Africa who were thrilled to be able to read the articles without
paying. It was satisfying, feeling like he had changed something for the
better.
Since then, Rooryck has heard from editors at other publications who ask for advice in flipping their own journals.
He is frank in his responses: You have to
be careful, he counsels. A publisher, he says, “has much more money than
you do and has much better lawyers than you do.”
Rooryck also had the advantage of name recognition and experience — he started editing Lingua in 1999.
Gemma Hersh, Elsevier’s vice president for
global policy, says that when editors leave to start an open-access
journal, “We wish them the very best of luck.” Lingua’s impact
factor, measuring citations of published articles over several years,
dropped from 2015 to 2016 but rose again in 2017. Glossa has not yet received one because it has not existed long enough, Rooryck says.
Rooryck leads two groups that aim to
transition subscriptions to open-access journals, one centered on the
field of linguistics called LingOA that flipped several journals but
doesn’t have the money to do more. The Fair Open Access Alliance also
works with editors and advisory boards who want to flip their journals
to open access. They issued a statement in support of Plan S in 2018.
Rooryck agrees with those who say that the
open-access movement had reached a turning point. Plan S “changed the
conversation quite substantially,” he says. The next step, he says, is
for more university libraries to stop paying for subscriptions, freeing
up money to support open-access publication of their faculty members’
work.
“What we do is bottom up,” he says. “But for
once, the bottom-up effort and the top-down effort meet — in the
principles we share.”
It was only a
matter of time before Emily L. Dennis got another request to review a
pending academic paper. They pop into her inbox a few times a month, and
she says yes regularly. But an email in December from the University of
California at Los Angeles, where she completed her Ph.D. in
neuroscience, changed that consideration.
One of America’s top research universities
was calling for a boycott. As the UC system negotiated its contract with
Elsevier, UCLA urged affiliated academics to consider declining to
peer-review articles for that publisher’s journals. The letter also
asked faculty members to consider publishing research in other journals,
particularly prestigious open-access publications.
Dennis, now a postdoctoral scholar at
Harvard University, hadn’t been following the UC negotiations closely,
nor was she particularly attuned to the open-access debate. But, reading
the email, she started to think differently about the time she spent
reviewing articles for for-profit companies without compensation.
Dennis respects many Elsevier journals, and
she’s not sure how she’ll handle the decision of where to publish her
future work if negotiations don’t improve before then. “I don’t want to
be the stick in the mud who says, ‘No, we can’t submit here.’ ”
Still, she decided to join the boycott.
The very next day, when asked, she declined to review a submission for
an Elsevier-owned journal. “I don’t feel it’s worth my time right now.”
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Negotiations in good faith continued through
January, a month after the contract was set to expire, and at the end
of the month the university said access was expected to continue amid
the discussions. But in many respects, Ivy Anderson and MacKie-Mason,
the lead UC negotiators on the Elsevier contract, are relying on people
like Dennis to carry forward their vision for the system’s library
contracts even after negotiations have concluded.
Their ultimate goal? Having one package that would cover subscription charges and open-access publishing fees,
meaning that articles published by UC faculty members would be
available freely around the globe. The vision is to transfer the
financial burden of reading research from readers to the researchers,
their universities, or funding agencies. UC’s prior five-year contract
with Elsevier cost about $50 million.
Darrell W. Gunter worked at Elsevier for
more than a decade starting in the 1990s. The constant refrain he heard
from universities in the early 2000s, he says, was that they needed an
"orderly retreat" from the Big Deal — journal packages sold in bulk by
major publishers — because library budgets couldn’t absorb the rising
costs of the bundles. (Publishers argue that they offer more value as
more pieces are published annually.)
"Libraries are under great pressure from
their administration to cut back on the number of materials they
collect," Gunter says. "You have this natural friction. You can’t
subscribe to everything, so you have to pick and choose."
Publishers are aware that something is
broken, Gunter says, and he expects disruption to come. Years ago, major
publishers wouldn’t want to talk about open access at all, he says.
Hersh, Elsevier’s vice president for global
policy, says the company responds to what customers ask for and evolves
its business in line with those needs. It’s not the company’s job, she
says, to move researchers to publish in one way or another; it’s to
reflect what researchers want.
The company publishes more than 170
open-access journals and more than 1,850 hybrid journals, and every
journal allows authors to publish a version of the paper open-access,
often with an embargo period.
"Yes, open access is important. It’s
important to our customers," says Hersh. "We’re also seeing that
subscription is really, really important."
The California system isn’t the first to
advocate for aspects of this model, and Elsevier certainly isn’t the
only company that sells big bundles to libraries. Six universities,
including two in the United States, canceled Big Deal bundles for 2018
with Springer Nature, Elsevier, and Wiley, according to the Scholarly
Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, which tracks cancellations
and promotes changing the structure and culture of publishing to promote
open access.
In June, the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology announced an agreement with the Royal Society of Chemistry, a
professional association that publishes dozens of journals. Through the
agreement, MIT subscribed to the society’s articles with the guarantee
that any MIT-authored article published in those journals could be read
freely, anywhere in the world.
University of California negotiators expect
others to follow that model soon. "There is a recognition beginning to
develop in the U.S.," Anderson says, "that maybe this direction is a
reasonable one to pursue."
"The open-access conversation is going mainstream in a way it hasn’t before.
Lindsay Ellis is a staff reporter. Follow her on Twitter @lindsayaellis, or email her at lindsay.ellis@chronicle.com.
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