1 Institutional Repositories and Open Access – a threat to society publishers or an opportunity? Nick Evans Chief Operating Officer, ALPSP

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to Open Access December 2001, Budapest OSI meeting of leaders exploring alternative publishing models. Defined term Open Access Concluded.
Advertisements

Partnering with Faculty / researchers to Enhance Scholarly Communication Caroline Mutwiri.
SN22: Introduction to Open Access Publishing for Research Administrators and Managers.
Mark Toole 25 March “the principle that the results of research that has been publicly funded should be freely accessible in the open domain is.
Will the Parasite Kill the Host? Sally Morris Morris Associates.
The Research Workflow Revolution: The Impact of Web 2.0 And Emerging Networking Tools On Research Workflow Bill Russell Communications Director 4 th April.
9 th Fiesole Collection Development Retreat, Hong Kong April 2007 The Many Faces of Open Access: The Asian Perspective VIEW FROM A PUBLISHER Mark.
Open Access: what is it about…. l Improving access to peer reviewed original research literature l Improving the use of the literature and data l Improving.
Open Access What’s Happening? Nia Wyn Roberts, March 2015.
Open Access in Summary Amos Kujenga EIFL-FOSS National Coordinator, Zimbabwe Lupane State University, October 2013 Lesotho College.
Scholarly publishing distribution models In traditional model, libraries/others serve as mediators between information and researchers by buying books.
Bloomsbury Conference on E-Publishing, June 2007 Subscription and Open Access Business Models in Journals Publishing Martin Richardson Managing Director.
Society for Endocrinology Society for Endocrinology BES March 2007 Steve Byford Society for Endocrinology
PubMed Central ANCHASL Spring Meeting April 1, 2005 Robert James Associate Director of Public Services Duke University.
Promoting Open Digital Scholarship - A Canadian Library Perspective Leila Fernandez Rajiv Nariani Marcia Salmon York University Libraries, Canada.
Gaining Momentum for Open Access Bas Savenije, Director General KB Tartu, Open Access Week 2011, 28 October 2011.
Information Services University of Nottingham Can open-access repositories and peer-reviewed journals co-exist? Stephen Pinfield University of Nottingham.
Learn more about Open Access Breakfast meeting at BMC March 30th 2010 Aina Svensson and Karin Meyer Lundén Electronic Publishing Centre, Uppsala University.
Open Access: A Publisher’s Perspective Daniel Wilkinson 20 th October, 2014.
Guide to a successful PowerPoint design – simple is best
Faculty Self-Archiving: The Gap between Opportunity and Practice Denise Troll Covey Carnegie Mellon University Libraries DLF Forum – November 2007.
Talking to our faculty about open access and authors’ rights Joyner Library Forum October 23, 2008.
What does the community of scientists “own”?  What do authors own?  What does the scholarly community own?
ARMA 6 th June Costs and payment of open access article processing charges.
OPEN ACCESS: THE BASICS Making your research available.
From Berlin back to Business OPEN Stellenbosch University Library and Information Service Mimi Seyffert Manager: Digitisation and Digital Services.
Alternative Models of Scholarly Communication: The "Toddler Years" for Open Access Journals and Institutional Repositories Greg Tananbaum President The.
© 2010 Koninklijke Bibliotheek – National Library of the Netherlands Open Access: Present Pitfalls and Future Scenarios Bas Savenije, Director General.
Sociologists for Women in Society: Open Access Publishing Panel Julie G. Speer Summer Meeting 2010 August 15, 2010.
Gerard van Westrienen SURFfoundation Doctoral e-Theses Lessons learned from the Dutch Promise of Science project.
SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS: FREE FOR ALL? A Seminar on the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee Inquiry The Commercial Publisher’s Viewpoint.
Open Access publishing for the Humanities Sparc Europe UK Roadshow 26 November 2014, St Andrews Eelco Ferwerda OAPEN Foundation.
The tension of Open Access: how not-for-profit publishers are reacting Sally Morris Chief Executive, Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers.
Scholarship-friendly publishing Sally Morris. Agenda What is ALPSP? What scholars want from publishing Two ALPSP studies The ‘give it away’ movement What.
Measuring Value and Outcomes of Reading Dr. Carol Tenopir University of Tennessee
Extending Access: Priorities and Solutions, November 2005 What are publishers doing to support research needs? Martin Richardson.
Scholarly Communications Through Open Access Graduate Student Orientation 2012 Presented by Isabel Silver, Academic and Scholarly Outreach George A. Smathers.
Open Access, What’s Next ? Publishers and Librarians Working Relationship Maurice Kwong BioMedCentral, Asia CONCERT, November 2010, Taipei.
Charleston Pre-Conference Nov. 3, 2004 David Goodman Palmer School of Library and Information Science Long Island University How to survive.
Amy Jackson UNM Technology Days July 22,  An institutional repository (IR) is a web-based database of scholarly material which is institutionally.
Publishing Trends: Open the University of Florida Presentation to IDS 3931: Discovering Research and Communicating Science October 21, 2010.
DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals Berlin March 2006.
BioOne – Supporting Society Publishers Through Collaboration Heather Joseph President, BioOne 21 Dupont Circle, Ste 800 Washington, DC 20036
 A Primer for Higher Education in disseminating Management Research Data Arnold Mwanzu Rodney Malesi.
Uganda Scholarly Digital Library (USDL) Makerere University’s Institutional Repository By Margaret Nakiganda URL:
How Scientists Use Journals: Electronic and Print Carol Tenopir Donald W. King
Should publishers offer OA? Thomas J. Walker University of Florida.
Open Access and Universal Deposit David Fox Librarians Forum May 11, 2009.
Open Access Opportunities, Policies & Rights IAS ACE Programme 19 November 2015.
Open access- a funders perspective (or “What we want from institutions”) CRC/RLUK/ARMA/SCONUL meeting 27 th January 2011 Robert Kiley, Head Digital Services,
Open CERN The context High Energy Physics information landscape Open Access: 3 myths to be dispelled Policies Some stats Licenses What’s next:
1 Electronic Storage and Document Delivery Services: A publishers’ viewpoint Nick Evans Member Services Manager Association of Learned and Professional.
Traditional Distribution Electronic Distribution User Florida Entomologist Issues Reprints FTP.
AACP Annual Meeting #RxOA #PharmEd14.  What is Open Access?  Spencer D. C. Keralis Research Associate  Institutional Repositories.
O PEN A CCESS : AN INTRODUCTION Open Access & Data Curation Team.
Open Access is Here to Stay: DATE: Monday, May 19, 2014 EVENT: VLAPF Conference LOCATION: Richmond, VA PRESENTERS: Kay Buchanan –
{ OA Policy implementation: Chemical Sciences Ljilja Ristic MScChem PGLIS MCLIP Physical Sciences Consultant & Subject Librarian, RSL February 2016.
THE BLAME GAME: OPEN ACCESS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR PUBLISHERS, LIBRARIANS AND ACADEMICS Fiesole on the Yarra 29 April 2005.
You Know What You Write, But Do You Know Your Rights? Understanding and Protecting Your Rights As an Author Jill Cirasella The Graduate.
Mafalda Picarra Schema for Open Access Policies. Overview » OA policy landscape » Rationale for developing a policy schema » An overview of the schema.
Open Access, the next REF and the CRIS Rowena Rouse Scholarly Communications Manager March 2016.
Open Access: what you need to know This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.This work is licensed under a Creative.
Issues in Scholarly Communication: Do they affect you? Andrea Imre, Julie Arendt, Howard Carter, Joseph Ripp Morris Library.
All About Scholarly Publishing Bonnie Ryan, Yuan Li Syracuse University Libraries.
The New Now: Institutional Repositories and Academia Institutional Repository USM April 17, 2015 Marilyn Billings Scholarly Communication Librarian.
Flipping Journals to Open Access Issues and Experiences David J Solomon, PhD Professor Emeritus College of Human Medicine Michigan State University.
Open Access, Research Funders, Research Data, and the REF
Institutional Repository and Friends
John Cox Associates Ltd
Unlocking the door: Open Access Janet Smith
Presentation transcript:

1 Institutional Repositories and Open Access – a threat to society publishers or an opportunity? Nick Evans Chief Operating Officer, ALPSP

2 What I shall talk about Are Institutional Repositories a fact of life? What is the likely effect on journals? Does it matter? What should societies do about it?

3 Are IR’s a fact of life? Not much evidence that academics actually want them But if self-archiving becomes mandatory, most say they will comply Growing number of research funders and institutions leaning towards voluntary or mandatory self-archiving policies Increasing inter-operability will heighten appeal

4 What is the likely effect on journals? Two surveys showing very clearly that when a sufficient percentage of the final version of author articles is freely (and easily) available, cancellations will follow Mark Ware: Factors in Journal Cancellation (ALPSP, 2006) Chris Beckett & Simon Inger: Self-archiving and Journal Subscriptions – co-existence or competition? (PRC, 2006)

5 Ware 340 responses 81% said availability in an OA repository would be a ‘very important’ or ‘important’ factor in cancellation decisions (but behind pricing (95%), usage (95%), user needs (93%)) Preprint/postprint versions not seen as adequate substitute (but PDF is) 32% think publishers should not be worried 11% think they should 54% think it’s too early to tell Beckett & Inger 424 responses ‘a significant number of librarians are likely to substitute OA materials for subscribed resources, given certain levels of reliability, peer review and currency’ Author’s unrefereed, uncorrected original MS is least adequate substitute Post-peer review version (irrespective of publishers’ editing) is adequate 38% think publishers should not be worried 38% think they should

6 What is the likely effect on journals? Publishers’ experience to date: subscriptions –British Medical Journal: when all content was free on BMJ site, print subs (and ads) fell dramatically. Now that only research articles are free, revenue has almost recovered –Molecular Biology of the Cell: in the 3 years following introduction of 2 month embargo, average annual subscription growth fell from 84% to 8% –Proceedings of the National Academy of Science: 1 month embargo in 2000  11% fall in subscriptions in 2001; 6 months embargo reduced this to 9% in 2002 What rational librarian, faced with the need to cancel some journals, would not choose those whose content is freely available elsewhere?

7 Does it matter? If many subscription journals disappear, will this matter? We all need to be aware of the likely of the likely consequences of our actions

8 Revenues from subscriptions support other activities Ulrich’s Periodicals Directory, 2005 (analysis by Raym Crow)

9 Non profit publishers put any surplus back into their other activities In particular, Learned Society publishers use surplus to support: –Conferences (33% of respondents applied median 7% of their publishing surpluses to this) –Membership fees (32% of respondents, 15% of surpluses) –Public education (26% of respondents, 7.5% of surpluses) –Bursaries (26% of respondents, 7.5% of surpluses) –Research (21% of respondents, 25% of surpluses) –Christine Baldwin, What do Learned Societies do with their Publishing Surpluses? (ALPSP/Blackwell, 2004)  Knock-on effects for the scholarly community if publishing surpluses are reduced or eliminated

10

11 Which journals are most vulnerable? Single- (or few-) journal publishers –‘Over 97% of society publishers publish three or fewer journals, with almost 90% publishing just one title’. –Raym Crow, Publishing Cooperatives: an alternative for society publishers (SPARC, 2006) –Society publishers limited to specific discipline Niche journals –Low circulation  higher price Low-profit journals –Less room for manoeuvre

12 What should publishers do about it? Awareness –Publishers need to make sure that the communities with which they engage understand the likely consequences of widespread mandatory self-archiving –Funders and others need to understand that ‘one size does not fit all’ subjects differ journals differ –The information must be based on factual evidence – research should continue into the actual effects as self-archiving mandates begin to bite

13 Publishers must Make content as available as possible (without going bust!) –Decide if they can switch to Open Access publishing or not (one-fifth are experimenting) Hybrid/author-choice model a possible first step (as advocated by David Prosser) –If not, decide whether they need an embargo period to protect subscriptions, and if so how long Will authors abide by this? –At the same time, be creative about adding value to scholarly communication in new ways

14 Adding value...

15 What should we do about it? Understand what journals are for –Journals serve authors and readers (directly) and funders and institutions (indirectly) –Both publishers and those whom journals serve need to analyse the functions currently carried out by journals, and –establish which of these must be preserved –and work out ways of doing so

16 Librarian Author Publisher Peer review tusks RAE Canopy OA Advocate Institutional Repository Handmaidens Research seeking tool Grant locators Web 2.0 tools Bank Manager Google The elephant in the room?

17 Thank you Nick Evans Chief Operating Officer, ALPSP +44 0(20)