Economic Issues in Scholarly Communications
Economic issues are at the heart of the crisis
in scholarly communication, and are also central to
emerging principles and practices in digital publishing.
On the one hand, scholarly journal publishing has become
commercialized and market forces have inflated costs for
these necessary academic tools well out of proportion to
other academic costs. On the other hand, electronic publication
within academia promises the possibility of publication
at little or no expense (se Open
Access).
Scholars are being urged to use alternative
publishing models and to support competetive alternatives
to the present profit-oriented system (see Advocacy).
To achieve profitability, commercial scholarly publishing
restricts access to its scholarly products by controlling
copyright (see Intellectual
Property Issues). Scholars and their host institutions
are being urged to negotiate with publishers to retain certain
publication rights so that authors and universities maintain
control of the intellectual property they create or sponsor.
Libraries are taking several measures to deal with the changing
economic landscape of academia: establishing institutional
repositories for the publication and preservation of
local scholarly work, measuring usage to determine which
journals' subscriptions will be canceled, promoting access
and submissions to open access journals (see Directory
of Open Access Journals), and establishing consortia
to share costs for resources. Much debate also centers around
appropriate pricing models for scholarly journals.
See "The Facts: The Economics of Publishing" (University
of California Office of Scholarly Communications <
http://osc.universityofcalifornia.edu/facts/econ_of_publishing.html>)
A comprehensive bibliography on economic issues can be found
within Charles W. Bailey, Jr.'s
Scholarly
Electronic Publishing Bibliography <
http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/>.