Last year I ran a series of Q&As to which I gave the title “The
State of Open Access”. In total I conducted 19 interviews, which are all listed
here.
During the time I was running the series I had a number of people
suggest to me that, in fairness, I too should give my views on the current
state of open access. I was initially resistant to the idea, since I see myself
more as an observer of the movement than a participant.
After giving it some thought, however, I concluded that — in the
interests of transparency and openness if nothing else — I ought to be prepared to answer the kind of questions I put to my interviewees.
I am therefore today publishing answers to a set of 11 questions that
were put to me by neurobiologist and open access advocate Björn Brembs. (Brembs was one of those I
interviewed, and his Q&A is here).
For those interested in reading my answers I have put them in a
downloadable PDF file.
But be warned gentle reader, the PDF is 28 pages long. I know, I know, it is
too long. But I am not going to apologise.
I am not going to apologise because it seems to me that most of the
commentary one reads on OA today tends to take place either on Twitter, in short fiery
blog posts by OA advocates, or in self-congratulatory articles and
communications by publishers. Moreover, much of this commentary tends to consist
of assertions rather than reasoned argument, and much of it amounts to little more than cheer leading, or attacks on those who hold different views about OA. That, of course, is the way
of the world. But I feel there should be space for longer, more reflective
pieces too, which I hope I have achieved in my answers to Brembs.
I do not anticipate that many, if any, OA advocates will agree with most
what I say, and I don’t expect publishers to agree either. But for good or bad
they represent the views of someone who has been observing and reporting on the
OA movement for more than a decade. Feel
free to ignore them!
For those who prefer not to download long PDFs here is a bullet list of
some of the things I say:
—
In my view, OA to research papers is inevitable.
—
I see a number of weaknesses in the way the OA
movement has organised itself over the years, and as a result of these weaknesses it is
likely that we will see OA policies introduced that OA advocates do not welcome,
and that the research community at large dislikes intensely.
—
That said, as the research community moves toward
OA I see two possible scenarios, one in which publishers effectively
appropriate OA to their own ends, another in which the research community takes
charge and oversees the development of an OA environment more suited to its
needs than the needs of publishers.
—
Essentially, therefore, I believe OA is at an important
transition point. If the research community wants to ensure that it gets an OA regime
that best meets its needs it should be urgently embracing OA today, and on its own terms.
If it waits until OA is thrust upon it will likely have to accept it in a far
less pleasing way. Act Now or Repent at Leisure!
—
I believe that institutional repositories need
to be filled with as much content as possible, as quickly as possible. So instead
of advising researchers to opt for pay-to-publish Gold OA, OA advocates should
be telling them to continue publishing in subscription journals and self-archive
their papers in their institutional repository by means of Green OA.
—
Research institutions should also be moving
quickly to follow the example of universities like University
College London and Yale,
and start publishing their own OA journals and books using their institutional
repositories.
—
I expect that by the time the transition period for the RCUK policy ends
(in five years’ time), we will know whether the scholarly
communication system is going to continue to be managed and controlled by
publishers in the OA world, or whether the research community has found it in itself to get
into the driver’s seat and begun moving full speed ahead to create a system in
its own image.
—
Ideally, the research community should be working
to develop a global scholarly communication infrastructure based on networks of
OA repositories. However, what currently seems more likely (in the short term
at least), is that there will be a bipartite system, with the developed world
opting for a system based on pay-to-publish Gold OA journals, and the
developing world adopting repository-based systems that build on the work of
services like SciELO
and African Journals Online (AJOL), along
with networks of institutional repositories like La Referencia.
Please note that I am not an OA advocate, and so my aim is not to
persuade anyone. These are just the views of someone who has spent ten years
writing about OA.
To read the Q&A (as
a PDF file) click HERE.