Biljana
Kosanović is Head of the Department of Scientific
Information at the National
Library of Serbia in Belgrade. Recently I spoke to Kosanović
about the research environment in Serbia, about access to international
journals, about local Serbian journals, about initiatives like doiSerbia, and about Open Access. It
turns out that the situation is not quite how I had envisaged it.
Biljana Kosanović |
Those who
advocate for Open Access (OA)
argue that in the age of the Internet the traditional subscription-based journal
system used to publish scholarly papers is outdated, and so places an
unnecessary barrier between researchers and published research.
Why? Because in
order to have their work published, researchers freely give their papers to
publishers, who then package them into journals and put those journals behind a
subscription paywall so that they can recoup their costs, and make a profit. Many,
however, believe that journal subscriptions are unreasonably high. Moreover,
argue OA advocates, while this paywall may have been inevitable in a
print world, in an online environment it is not, and simply creates a needless accessibility problem.
For so long as
research libraries could afford to subscribe to all the journals they needed
this accessibility problem was minimal, or non-existent. With the amount of
research published growing year by year, however, it has become increasingly
difficult for research libraries to afford all the journals they need — creating
an affordability problem. And this affordability problem has led to a serious accessibility
problem.
In an attempt
to resolve the problem, in the 1990s publishers created the so-called Big
Deal. Instead of selling subscriptions on a journal-by-journal basis, they started
to sell discounted packages of (sometimes hundreds) of journals on an
all-you-can-eat basis.
Librarians
initially welcomed the Big Deal, since it gave them more for less. Subsequently,
however, they concluded that it had exacerbated the affordability problem, and
so made the accessibility problem much worse. Not only have prices continued to
rise, but libraries have come to feel that they are locked into large over-priced
contracts from which they are now unable to escape.
Untenable
Underlining how
serious the problem has become, last year the library of the wealthiest university in the
world — Harvard — published a Memorandum
in which it asserted that subscription-based scholarly publishing is now
untenable. “Many large journal publishers have made the scholarly communication
environment fiscally unsustainable and academically restrictive,” the
Memorandum read. “This situation is exacerbated by efforts of certain
publishers … to acquire, bundle, and increase the pricing on journals.” [I.e. sell
Big Deals, and at increasingly higher prices].
Even Harvard’s
wealth, it would seem, is no longer able to afford to provide access to all the
journals its researchers need. So Harvard Library proposed a number of
solutions, most notably that researchers should embrace Open Access (OA), which ensures that
research papers are made freely available outside publishers’ paywalls.
If the library
of the world’s wealthiest university can no longer afford to provide its faculty
with all the research they need, I thought, how appalling must it be for researchers
in universities based in less wealthy countries? It was for this reason that I
made contact with Biljana Kosanović. Serbia,
we should note, is a transition
country. It is also classified by many as a developing country (e.g. here
and here).
To my surprise,
however, Kosanović, informed me that access to international research is not a
serious problem in Serbia.
Pretty satisfied
She added that this
is because eleven years ago the Consortium of Serbian Libraries for
Coordinating Acquisition (KoBSON)
was created, and charged with negotiating and managing national licensing
schemes (Big Deals) with scholarly publishers. The aim was to ensure that Serbian
researchers had access to all the international journals they needed.
How do we know
that access to international journals is currently satisfactory in Serbia? “Two
years ago — when we celebrated the tenth anniversary of KoBSON — we did a big
survey of our users,” Kosanović explained to me. “We got around 3,000
respondents — which is pretty good for a user population of 30,000. Based on
that, I would say that our users are pretty satisfied with what we offer them.
There were only a few publishers they mentioned that we don’t have in our
collections.”
How can it be
that access to research appears to be less problematic for Serbian researchers
than it is for those based at Harvard University?
Read the
interview with Kosanović below to find out. In doing so you will also learn something
of the research information environment in Serbia, and you will learn about the
current state of Open Access in the country — for despite Serbian researchers’
current satisfaction with their access needs, Kosanović is a committed OA
advocate.
“KoBSON is not
a long-term solution,” Kosanović explained, adding, “I am sure that OA is the
future of scholarly publishing, but this future will not arrive in the next
year or two — so initiatives like KoBSON remain essential.”
In the
meantime, there is much to be done. Currently only one university in
Serbia has signed the Berlin
Declaration, there are no OA mandates, and there are few institutional
repositories.
On the other
hand, more and more Serbian journals are becoming OA, thanks in part to the efforts
of Kosanović and her colleagues who manage the doiSerbia initiative.
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If you wish to read the interview with Biljana Kosanović, please click on the link below.
I
am publishing the interview under a Creative Commons licence, so
you are free to copy and distribute it as you wish, so long as you
credit me as the author, do not alter or transform the text, and do
not use it for any commercial purpose.
To read the interview (as a PDF file) click HERE.
EIFL is very pleased to work with KoBSON on Open Access projects since 2003. "Supporting Serbian journals publishers to switch to article processing charges (APCs)" project was a good opportunity to educate publishers and policy makers (the Ministry of Education and Science) on different business models and it's amazing how much was done with just $4,000 grant [case study PDF]. This year we are also happy to partner with National Library of Serbia - KoBSON to provide a small grant of $3.950 to support DOISerbiaThesis to motivate young researchers to deposit their PhD theses in Open Access institutional repositories. And Serbian theses are already searchable on the DART-Europe E-theses Portal.
ReplyDeleteTwo universities in Serbia signed the Berlin Declaration - Belgrade and Nis.
ReplyDelete