Rethinking academic publishing ??
Vanessa Rosa, Ph.D.
?? I help scientists translate their research into broader impacts ??
?? If you prefer listening to reading, this content is available on our podcast:
We’ve discussed how academic publishing is an extractive business model and how this model persists through prestige .
Today, we’ll explore:
Sustainable publishing models that incentivize quality research.
In the process, we will examine:
Roots to Unsustainable Academic Publishing
?Arguably, the greatest barrier to reforming academic publishing is that journal reputability is equated to quality research.
This toxic norm is rooted in five factors:
These factors contribute to traditional journals' power over what is perceived as reputable or quality research.
How can we incentivize research quality and impact over journal prestige?
Supplanting Ethical Publishing Practices
We can supplant the toxic roots of the problem with better alternatives:
By addressing these factors and promoting a publishing model emphasizing quality over prestige, we can create a more equitable and sustainable academic publishing landscape that aligns the interests of the public, science, researchers, and universities.
Extractive to Ethical: Who Will Pay to Reform Academic Publishing?
Remember this from Part 1 ?
A good business model sustainably aligns the company's, producers', and customers' interests.
With this in mind, academic publishing can be remodeled in ways that align incentives and promote sustainability.
What would the business model for an academic publishing cooperative look like?
The customers would be students, researchers, practitioners, and the general public, benefiting from unrestricted knowledge access.
The resources include open-access datasets, open-science initiatives and collaborations, and open-source publishing platforms offering publishing and indexing services for research outputs and tools.
This would enable further collaboration and reuse.
The producers manage the platform and researchers who, as usual, are engaged in designing and conducting research as part of their service, impact, and teaching within a university or research center. However, they aim to preprint accessible research articles, data, case studies, presentations, and other means of conveying information and telling stories for public dissemination and impact - not academic reverence or clout.
Additionally, researchers are compensated through stipends, honorariums, or research funding awards for facilitating and providing open, post-publication peer review and discussion within their communities.
How will we pay for this lovely academic publishing system?
Traditional publishers fund their academic publishing predominantly through university library subscriptions.
I don't know how old you are, but if you remember things like telephone books, newspapers, or cable TV. This is similar antiquity to that.
?A revenue model established on a single source of something likely to get replaced by technological advancements is not particularly sustainable.
?This is why so many traditional business models tend to fail in the age of information.
Or maybe it's all the millennials' fault, I don't know. ????
?We need a distributed revenue model, not an outdated extractive model relying on consolidated power.
What if we took notes from the successful revenue models of reformed or newly arisen hubs for information exchange that have become the go-to resources for learning in the information age?
For example, consider the business model of public libraries:
Public libraries provide access to resources, programs, and expertise, often funded by public money, grants, and donations. This model ensures that the value created by the library is accessible to the community without extracting excessive profits from users.
Or even the business model of YouTube:
In the YouTube model, content creators and YouTube share revenue generated from advertising and subscription fees for premium content. This aligns with the interests of the company, producers, and customers, as they all benefit from the value created by the platform.
The revenue required to cover the cost of services provided by the academic publishing cooperative could be generated from a diversified number of sources:
In this model, the publisher’s resources are publicly funded research worth less than the revenue generated from partnerships and funding. This covers the publisher’s costs and risks while allowing researchers to share their work freely.
Producers' compensation is worth more than just having access to publish their research independently. They benefit from the company's publishing, distribution, and visibility support, which helps them reach a wider audience and significantly impact the scientific community.
For customers, the research is worth more than the cost of access because of its value in knowledge, insights, and potential applications. The open-access model ensures that the research is freely available to anyone who wants to learn from it.
This model aligns the interests of the company, producers, and customers, creating a sustainable and ethical business model for academic publishing. It addresses the issues of the extractive model, where publishers profit from privatizing publicly funded research, and researchers are not adequately compensated for their labor.
By adopting a partnership-based approach and focusing on the shared values of academic institutions and libraries, this model can help transform the current academic publishing landscape into a more inclusive and accessible system.
This all sounds lovely, but...
What do we do while this system becomes the norm?
We could...
?And overall, we could be more selective about where we publish our research.
?In The Cuvette, an academic publishing cooperative for science educators , I published a resource to support researchers in identifying ethical journals:
Conclusion
?It's important to remember that our participation makes this system persist.
?We control it. Not gatekeeping publishers profiting from our work. We can dismantle this system. Reforms start small but gain momentum with collaboration. So, let's work together to question assumptions holding us back, organize against exploitation, and support those silenced by bias.
References and Resources
Here's the infographic: Rosa, Ph.D., V. (2023). Demystifying academic publishing: A Researcher’s guide to ethical journals. In Volume 1. The Cuvette. https://www.thecuvette.org/pub/zy5kna35
1. Takeuchi, H., & Quelch, J. A. (1983). Quality Is More Than Making a Good Product. Harvard Business Review, 139-145. Retrieved from https://hbr.org/1983/07/quality-is-more-than-making-a-good-product
2. Kuleuven. (n.d.). Establish a Sustainable Scholarly Publishing Model. Retrieved from https://www.kuleuven.be/open-science/what-is-open-science/challenges/establish-a-sustainable-scholarly-publishing-model
3. Western University. (n.d.). Sustainability Challenges in Scholarly Publishing. Retrieved from https://www.lib.uwo.ca/files/scholarship/5-imtg-sustainability_challenges_en_finalWL.pdf
4. ResearchGate. (n.d.). Towards a More Sustainable Academic Publishing System. Retrieved from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/348589262_Towards_a_more_sustainable_academic_publishing_system
5. University of Minnesota Libraries. (2019, March). U California and Efforts to Create Sustainable, Accessible Scholarly Publishing. Retrieved from https://www.continuum.umn.edu/2019/03/u-california-and-efforts-to-create-sustainable-accessible-scholarly-publishing/
6. Australian Competition & Consumer Commission. (n.d.). The Impact of Digital Platforms on News and Journalistic Content. Retrieved from https://www.accc.gov.au/system/files/ACCC+commissioned+report+-+The+impact+of+digital+platforms+on+news+and+journalistic+content,+Centre+for+Media+Transition+(2).pdf
Next: Can empathy hurt reform? ??
While exploring the idea of "framing" research related to equity, I came across an interesting perspective on how empathy impacts my work.
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