Ce diaporama a bien été signalé.
Le téléchargement de votre SlideShare est en cours. ×

Why is Open Access for Monographs Important for Researchers?

Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité
Publicité

Consultez-les par la suite

1 sur 12 Publicité

Plus De Contenu Connexe

Similaire à Why is Open Access for Monographs Important for Researchers? (20)

Plus par Jisc (20)

Publicité

Plus récents (20)

Why is Open Access for Monographs Important for Researchers?

  1. 1. Why is Open Access for Monographs Important for Researchers? From Compliance to Culture Dr Emma Gallon (Books Manager, University of London Press) JISC OA monograph myth busting one: compliance vs culture, 2 November 2022
  2. 2. University of London Press • Launched December 2019, based at the School of Advanced Study • Humanities books and journals • 20–25 books per year • Predominantly open access publisher – c.70% OA and growing • Opening up humanities research
  3. 3. Open access compliance vs culture • Benefits of open access • OA monograph authors’ motivations (and deterrents) • Implications
  4. 4. Benefits of open access
  5. 5. Open access monograph authors’ motivations
  6. 6. Reach and accessibility Opening up academic research via freely available digital outputs based upon research already funded by taxpayers - provides a wider societal benefit …given the subject matter and aims of our book, it was important to remove as many barriers to access as possible... For our authors, we are also responsible for platforming their work and enabling it to be read as widely as possible The wide availability ensured by OA maximises the impact of any monograph by opening the work up to scholars for research purposes, as well as the general public and students …an essential way to make academic research as accessible as possible to as many people as possible From a practical point of view, it has made teaching more efficient and easier to acquire sources The advance of OA monographs means that works can be accessed instantly for free, saving international students having to pay high costs By facilitating wider access, and removing reader-facing paywalls to humanities work, open access both enables a wider range of people to engage with critical historical work, and in the longer term contributes to a greater variety of perspectives in historical practice Pay walls keeping academic research from public consumption entrenches inequality, it limits researchers access to knowledge unless they are attached to wealthy academic institutions. This overwhelmingly means that researchers who come from lower socio-economic backgrounds or from the Global South are disproportionately impacted
  7. 7. Reach and accessibility (cont.) …facilitating the author's contribution to the field, and facilitating other scholars' engagement with the author's work Open access enables early career, independent, precarious and established scholars (and others) access to the latest research. This enables people to situate their work within current expertise in the field and may help to promote future collaboration and funding opportunities. If you are an ECR, independent or precarious scholar, trying to increase your publication record and your profile, open access is essential. Open access increases the citation potential of your work The primary factor was accessibility for readers. I know that I will be able to disseminate my research to as wide a global audience as possible and it won’t be behind a paywall or exorbitant book costs Since the funded project was working at the intersection between academic history, and family and local history, that many of our readers would be drawn from these non academic areas. Therefore, we felt it essential that the outputs of our publicly funded project should published in an open access PDF version Humanities research is often relatable and has important conclusions for contemporary society and understandings of the world, making this research as widely available as possible is important As a publicly-funded project, it was important that the research be shared as widely as possible, and that neither access to finance, nor circumstance, nor academic affiliation should hinder that access. And of course, it was an especially good thing for someone like me: an early career researcher who had just finished their PhD and was desperate to find academic work as soon as possible. By publishing open access, I would ensure that my book - my research - was immediately available to anybody who heard about it and wanted to look at it
  8. 8. Compliance Our first concerns were about complying with the mandatory requirement of our large research council grant (AHRC), to ensure outputs were open access. In addition, all of the academic contributors to the volume worked for universities where making your research available in an open access format was necessary in order to be included in the REF. As a new scholar, an open access publication is a significant addition to my CV ('REFable' publications). There are professional reasons; very soon, all monographs funded by UK research grants will have to be OA I think that open access is becoming increasingly important in the academic world, especially when thinking about REF requirements, and so this was a sensible move for my career. Academic employers look very kindly on open access books … for meeting REF standards…
  9. 9. Supervisors’ recommendations The established scholars who I spoke to (e.g. old PhD supervisors) were enthusiastic about the prospect of me publishing my book open access, which not only reassured me, but encouraged me to think that it was a good thing I was particularly influenced by the words of my former PhD supervisor who told me that ‘writing academic history was more about building a readership than restricting one’
  10. 10. OA deterrents To be honest, the open access question wasn’t high on my list of priorities when going about the publication of my book. My first priority was simply to publish my research as a monograph, and to do so in a manner that carry as much academic respectability as possible so that I would be able to find an academic job …almost like vanity publishing, or like I'd self-published an e-book, rather than that a publisher had published my work 'properly’ Insofar as I thought about open access, I wasn’t convinced it was a good thing. I had in my head a vague equation between academic respectability and ivory- tower inaccessibility; that is to say, it seemed instinctively to me that the sorts of things which get given away free were not as rigorous, prestigious etc. as the sorts of things which are harder to come by, and that academic books, being often very pricey, are the hardest things of all to come by
  11. 11. Challenges of open access WHAT ARE THE BIGGEST OPEN ACCESS CHALLENGES OR CONCERNS FOR YOU? % OF VOTE Finding funding for open access publication 55% (Perceived) quality of publication 42% Difficult to understand what my institution, funder or publisher requires me to do 32% Long-term preservation of the online publication 26% Predatory publishers 23% Finding open access content as a reader 23% Concern over how others may reuse my work 23% Lack of available open access publication options in my field 19% Additional workload to meet institution’s, funder’s or publisher’s policies 13% Not relevant or useful for my discipline 6% Source: SAS Open Access training session poll; February 2022 (n=40)
  12. 12. Concluding thoughts If the goal is to shift from an environment and language of open access compliance to that of an open research culture, important to understand researchers’ publication motivations to inform: o researcher support and education o incentives and disincentives (and recognise their intended and unintended impacts) o policy implementation and communication o publishing models and options RESPONSIBLE OPEN RESEARCH / GOOD RESEARCH PRACTICE Open access compliance Open research culture

×