Correspondence:
E-Mail
: vinodscaria@yahoo.co.in
Introduction:
We
are now into the fourth decade of the serials crisis and
into just about a couple of decades into the
communication revolution brought about by the spawning
Internet technologies. The advent of Internet as a
technology capable of disseminating information faster,
with a wider reach and virtually free had been welcomed
by the publishing industry with panic.
The
panic was partly due to the fact that the huge margins
of profit generated could not be possibly maintained,
due to the emergence of technology that would threaten
not only the existence of their economic frameworks, but
also lead to the widespread copyright abuse and lead to
the flourishing of the hitherto limited contraband to a
global scale.
Scholarly
communication and the developing world:
Two
major barriers plagued scholarly communication in the
developing world. Firstly the access barrier, which
meant researchers were not able to access researches of
their peers, due to the high costs of publications, and
the publication crisis, which meant researchers had
lesser avenues to publish/disseminate their research.
This evolved into a vicious circle, draining expertise
and scholarship and became one of the factors promoting
Safari Research.
In
fact, many of the developing countries had adapted to
their crisis by bringing up indigenous Journals, and
adapted by creating their own circle, often prominently
separated from the International scenario, similar to
the scholarly communication in the cold-war era.
Open
Access Movements
The open access movements pioneered by the
Budapest Open Access Initiative [BOAI] .The Open access
movements aimed at creating a free and barrier less
access structure to scholarly communication employing
the now ubiquitous Internet. The open access framework
was created whereby the author would pay for the peer
review, and organizational expenses as well as for
permanent archival. In exchange, he would get the rights
to copy, distribute or disseminate as much as reprints
for free. Researchers could also access the research
universally for free.
The
initiatives foresee that removing access barriers to
literature will accelerate research, enrich education,
share the learning and lay the foundation for uniting
humanity in a common intellectual conversation and quest
for knowledge .The BOAI defines open access as:
“…by
‘open access’ to this literature, we mean its free
availability on the public internet, permitting any
users to read, download, copy, distribute, print,
search, or link to the full texts of these articles,
crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software,
or use them for any other lawful purpose, without
financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those
inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself
…..”[1].
The
Open Access movements are basically based on two pillar
stones of Self Archiving [2] and creation of open access
journals [3].
Economics
of Open Access: When open access is discussed, one major
question to answer is how to cover the expenses incurred
in maintaining editorial assistance and peer review,
publishing and archiving. The BOAI clearly describes the
economic strategy that is to be employed. It quotes
“There
are many alternative sources of funds for this purpose,
including the foundations and governments that fund
research, the universities and laboratories that employ
researchers, endowments set up by discipline or
institution, friends of the cause of open access,
profits from the sale of add-ons to the basic texts,
funds freed up by the demise or cancellation of journals
charging traditional subscription or access fees, or
even contributions from the researchers themselves.
There is no need to favor one of these solutions over
the others for all disciplines or nations, and no need
to stop looking for other, creative alternatives.”
[1]
The
Open Society Institute [4] backed by philanthropist
George Soros which is behind the initiative also has
plans to support open access Journals. The Institute
gives away about $ 100,000 for publication of articles
of researchers of some 67 countries where the Soros
foundation network is active.
Open
Access Journals: A brief description of Economic Models:
JMIR
[Journal of Medical Internet Research] [5]
The
JMIR was one of the pioneer open access online only
journals. Unlike the former journals, this one was
exclusively published in the electronic form, and was
free to access at its website. The journal initially did
not charge anything from the authors, but from December
2003 charges a processing fee of $500 per article from
every author. Fee is waived as per the BOAI support to
researchers from countries where the Soros foundation is
active.
BioMedCentral
Journals [6]
>75Nos
BioMedCentral
[BMC] is a leading commercial open access publisher and
publishes more than 75 open access Journals that are
exclusively published electronically. All the Journals
are archived in PMC also. This open access publisher
charges for every article as processing charges.
The publisher also has a policy of waiving fees for
researchers in the developing countries.
It
is clear that most online only journals rely on an
economic model based on charging the authors for
covering the costs and making profit. None of these
journals derive major share of costs from third parties
like advertisements, sponsorships or provision of value
added services like print copies, CD ROM formats etc.
This would mean the model would be a far cry from what
envisaged by the BOAI, and would mean the brunt would
always fall on the shoulders of researchers.
Open Access and its
impact on the Developing world:
The
impact of the open access initiatives on the developing
world can be mainly discussed in the following headings.
Impact
on Information Dissemination
Impact on
articles from the developing world
Impact on
existing publishing infrastructure in the developing
world
Impact on
cost of research
In
the sphere of information dissemination, the open access
initiatives will surely do a big job. It will create a
unique opportunity whereby researchers in these
countries would be able to access literature, which were
hitherto unavailable due to barriers to access based on
economic motives. This would surely pave way for a
revolution in information access and thus breaking the
vicious circle of poverty in information, which was a
rule.
It
is clear that at the costs which many of the publishers
charge authors, most authors of developing countries
would find it hard to afford publishing their articles
in these Journals. Though at present the BOAI has a
policy of waiving publishing costs, the policy is not to
be regarded as an everlasting one, but rather as charity
with no guarantee that it would continue. This would
mean one needs to look at other opportunities for funds
to sustain the policy of open access.
The
most devastating impact of the policy would be perhaps
on the publishing infrastructure in the developing
world. This publishing infrastructure that supported and
sustained the scholarly thinking in the developing world
and supported open access which was sustained at the
meager profit these journals generated would find
themselves at sea when they find their subscriptions
being cancelled due to the huge influx of free
literature. Most of these journals, supported by
advertisements and subscription charges would find it
difficult to reorient themselves to the e-economy.
Toeing in line to the trend by charging authors would be
devastating, as authors would find it economical to try
out international journals rather than constrain to
regional boundaries.
The
movement has also the potential to destabilize the
existence of smaller journals. Large commercial firms
like the BMC may be able to drastically cut their costs,
since they need to maintain a supporting team, which
would be shared by all their journals. But this is
certainly not the case of small journals that need to
maintain the team, irrespective how much papers they
receive.
The
new economy would also have its impact on the cost of
research also. Though researchers who would have the
extravagance of adequate funding to cover their
publication costs would find it interesting and
efficient mode of publication, most of the researchers
in developing countries, who often undertake research by
funding from their pay cheques would find it hard to
stomach the fact that they need to shell out more than
ever to see their work being published.
Conclusions:
The
Open Access Initiative is something that we can hardly
afford to miss, given the immense potential the movement
offers at freeing scholarly communication, utilizing the
Internet as a technology for mass change. At the same
time we need to keep in mind that any policy that does
not take into consideration or that does not seek the
opinion of the majority of scholars involved will surely
make no significant impact.
It
is also the need of the hour to shift our vision beyond
just Journals. Internet offers potential to drastically
change how we view peer-reviewed literature. We need to
harness the enormous potential of E-prints. The Open
archives initiative [7] has done much at creating an
interoperable repository of scholarly communication.
Systems for open peer review of such e-prints utilizing
Internet is a potentially plausible framework. This
would impart transparency to peer review as well as
create a cost effective method of quality assurance.
More thoughts need to be directed in this direction.
While
the open Access initiatives will do much at creating
equity in distribution of scholarly communication,
especially in the developing world, much has to be done
to protect and sustain the existence of small and
regional journals, which are very much essential at
maintaining the health of that population, since region
specific health information is essential and inseparable
for maintaining the quality of health in each
geographical area. Similarly the interests of smaller
journals should be also taken into consideration.
References:
[1]
Budapest Open Access Initiative WebPage URL:http://www.soros.org/openaccess/read.shtml
[2]
Steven Harnads Article on Self Archiving URL: http://www.cogsci.soton.ac.uk/~harnad/Tp/nature4.htm
[3]
Budapest Open Access Initiative WebPage URL: http://www.soros.org/openaccess/journals.shtml
[4]
Open Access Intstitute Homepage URL: http://www.soros.org/
[5]
Journal of Medical Internet Research URL: http://www.jmir.org
[6]
BioMedCentral URL: http://www.biomedcentral.com
[7]
Open Archives Initiative URL:http://www.openarchives.org/
Competing
Interests:
The author owns VirtualMed and MedPub, which publishes
and offers consultancy to many Indian online journals in
Biomedical domain.
Source
of Funding: None
©Vinod
Scaria. This article was written on April 12, 2003.
Verbatim copying and publishing of this article is
permitted in any media provided the access is not
restricted in any sort. The author welcomes critical
appraisal of this article. Please contact him at vinodscaria@yahoo.co.in
.