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ICSTI: news items
- To: epc@iucr.org
- Subject: ICSTI: news items
- From: Pete Strickland <ps@iucr.org>
- Date: Fri, 31 Oct 2003 12:49:56 +0000
- Organization: IUCr
---------------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: Study on socio-economic impacts of scientific information The International Council for Scientific and Technical Information (ICSTI) commissioned a study to identify impacts of scientific, technical and medical information (STM) services on the knowledge-based economy, and to describe the role of STM information organizations in national innovation systems. To register for free access to the study entitled The Information Imperative: A Framework for Measuring Impacts of STM Information Services and STM Information Organizations, visit the ICSTI web site at http://www.icsti.org/study.php <http://www.icsti.org/study.php> . Presented at an ICSTI public conference in May 2003, the study identifies areas where STM information organizations provide value to society and offers a generic framework for measuring key socio-economic impacts. STM organizations will find useful guidelines for planning and carrying out their own impact assessments. The proceedings of the conference, published in ICSTI Forum, number 43, are also available free on the ICSTI site. For more information on the study, please contact Barry Mahon, Executive Director, ICSTI at icsti@icsti.org <mailto:icsti@icsti.org>. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: WSIS Discussions on Open Access Those of you interested/involved in the forthcoming World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) may be interested to read the report concerning the fight to get the words 'Open Access' into the final document for the Summit. The report by Francis Muguet, the chair of the Scientific Information Working Group for WSIS, follows the recent PrepCom3 for WSIS. It is available at: http://www.wsis-si.org/si-prepcom3-report.html The composition of the Working Group is CHAIRMAN Dr. Francis Muguet - muguet@ensta.fr (ENSTA/MDPI) STEERING COMMITTEE Dr. R. Stephen Berry (berry@uchicago.edu) Dr. Jonathan Cave (cave@rand.org) Dr. Jean-Claude Guédon (jean.claude.guedon@umontreal.ca) Dr. Shu-Kun Lin,MDPI (lin@mdpi.org) (currently there are Eight Nobel Prize winners in the editorial boards of MDPI Open Access Journals) Dr.Peter Suber (peters@earlham.edu) Sinikka Sipilä (Sinikka.Sipila@fla.fi) Dr. Graeme Johanson (Graeme.Johanson@sims.monash.edu.au) ADVISORY BOARD Dr. Robert F. Curl, 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (rfcurl@rice.edu) Dr. Richard R. Ernst,1991 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (ernst@phys.chem.ethz.ch) Dr. Yuan-Tseh Lee, 1986 Nobel Prize in Chemistry (ytlee@gate.sinica.edu.tw) Dr Yuri Bushuev, ISUCT (bushuev@isuct.ru) Dr. Rafael Capurro, ICIE (capurro@hdm-stuttgart.de) Dr. Stevan Harnad, Open Archives Initiative, Eprints (harnad@ecs.soton.ac.uk) Bruno Oudet, French Delegation (Bruno.Oudet@imag.fr) Dr. Jerome Reichmann (reichman@law.duke.edu) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: Wellcome Report, summary available You will all presumably have seen or heard of a recently released report by the (UK) Wellcome Foundation on Economic analysis of scientific research publishing. If you have not the report is available from: http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/en/scipub/index.htm The Executive Summary is as follows. Executive summary ----------------- Implications of current practice for the research community ----------------------------------------------------------- 1. The current market structure does not operate in the long-term interests of the research community. 2. Commercial publishers are dominant though many top journals are published by not-for-profit organizations. 3. The public good element of scientific work means market solutions are inefficient. 4. Electronic publishing is not currently challenging the dominance of commercial publishers. Why are commercial publishers dominant? Demand ---------------------------------------------- 5. Demand is price-inelastic because: * price is unimportant at point of use for the research community; * journals are not easily substitutable for each other. 6. Libraries operate in the commercial market and purchase up to their budget limits. 7. Other sources of demand, such as private companies and health services, are uncoordinated. Why are commercial publishers dominant? Supply ---------------------------------------------- 8. Authors face a limited number of journals, through which their work is purchased . The primary concerns of authors are the reputation and reach of the journal. In general, authors are not concerned with price and cost characteristics. There is also a limited amount of substitutability between journals for authors when offering their work for publication. 9. Journals are published by not-for-profit publishers and commercial publishers institutions with different objectives and modes of working. 10. All publishers, including commercial publishers, provide authors and editorial boards with the services and outputs they need. Why are commercial publishers dominant? Market behaviour -------------------------------------------------------- 11. The market can be characterized as having two interlinked parts: an academic market and a commercial market. They operate according to different rules and priorities. The academic market operates with little recognition of the existence of the commercial market. The commercial market attempts to manage the academic market. 12. Commercial publishers are currently more active than other institutions in operating in both markets. They attempt to control supply in the commercial market through mergers/takeovers and to manage demand through price and service to libraries. The commercial publishers have set up price-service packages which enhance their position and undermine the position of the not-for-profit sector. A major example of this the big deal in effect requires libraries to take more journals than they might otherwise choose from the commercial publishers. The limits on the libraries abilities to change the package in the big deal result in cuts in subscriptions to journals from other publishers whenever the libraries face financial constraints. A further implication of these arrangements is that citations to the commercial publishers journals are likely to increase, at the expense of the not-for-profit sector, thus increasing the apparent value of those journals. 13. The commercial publishers offer good service and speed to the academic market and many academics are currently largely unaware and unconcerned about the state of scientific publishing. The importance of electronics ----------------------------- 14. Electronic publishing provides speed and access to readers which is an important characteristic in scientific, technical and medical publishing. 15. Electronic delivery removes some barriers to entry on the supply side thus making it easier for new suppliers to enter the market. The threat of entry acts as a constraint on the behaviour of companies currently in the market. Some actual market entry has taken place particularly through SPARC. 16. Electronic journals are likely to challenge paper-only journals since they are popular with academics-as-users and carry lower fixed costs than paper journals. The acceptability of electronic journals to academics-as-authors is less clear at present. 17. The control of electronic access is a major issue currently being faced. The use of open archives and the ownership of copyright have significant implications for the control of access. The current position -------------------- 18. Commercial publishers are providing a high-quality, high-price service, with restrictions placed on ease of access through policies such as the big deal . 19. Learned societies have been limited in their responses by their objectives, which restrict them to the areas in which they can work, and their perception that the commercial sector is not threatening the work of the societies. 20. On the demand side, SPARC and others, including the not-for-profit sector, have promoted open archives and page charges for publishing as ways of capturing the potential of electronic publication and maintaining the economic viability of publishers in general. 21. A key issue relates to the problem of achieving what many see as a desirable outcome open archives and page charges from a position where, for academics, publication is apparently free. What will happen? ----------------- 22. The existence of the means to create significant change does not mean change will occur. The fact that electronic media exist has implications for the market. It is up to the players in the market to decide how they will use the means at their disposal. The dominance of the commercial publishers will be challenged only if other players use the opportunities available to them. The main players ---------------- 23. Each of the main players have different objectives and different ways of working. They have different expectations of what the market will deliver for them and what their obligations to the market are. Each of them can be influenced in different ways. The main players are: * the commercial publishers; * the not-for-profit sector; * research libraries; * academic researchers; * library and research funders. (We have not included government in the list because their interest is likely to be dominated by the competitive position of the sector as a whole.) The future? ----------- 24. This report sets out a number of possible scenarios each of which is plausible and depends upon different reactions from, and interactions between, the key players: * more of the same; * commercial withdrawal; * commercial publishers gain more control; * open access becomes dominant. 25. Research funding organizations could intervene in different ways to make one, or a combination, of the scenarios more likely. Interventions which influence the key players will change the scenarios or increase the likelihood of one over another. Our suggestions, which are not exhaustive, cover the main areas in which we believe activity may be influential and aim at changing the balance of power not restructuring the whole market. Research funding organizations could: * set out their position clearly, or make public their concerns or intentions; * support different ways of funding publications, particularly electronic page charges, through research grants; * provide support to the open archives initiatives; * actively support open access and the retention of copyright by authors and institutions; * coordinate, or suggest the setting up of a coordinating mechanism for, responses from the different funding bodies in the UK, Europe and, to the extent possible, worldwide; * coordinate, or suggest the setting up of a coordinating mechanism for, non-library demand for journals from private sector companies such as pharmaceutical companies or biotechnology companies and from health services; * provide support to publishers from the not-for-profit sector, for example pump priming funds for electronic archives; * support the setting up of not-for-profit big deals to protect the not-for-profit publishers; * support perhaps endow the setting up of a central electronic deposit library; * exert pressure to recognize electronic journals in bibliometric assessments and impact factors. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- -- Best wishes Peter Strickland Managing Editor IUCr Journals ---------------------------------------------------------------------- IUCr Editorial Office, 5 Abbey Square, Chester CH1 2HU, England Phone: 44 1244 342878 Fax: 44 1244 314888 Email: ps@iucr.org Ftp: ftp.iucr.org WWW: http://journals.iucr.org/ NEWSFLASH: Complete text of all IUCr journals back to 1948 now online! 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