Langues et littératureAnglaisJekyll

Martin Paul Eve

Martin Paul Eve
Page d'accueilFlux Atom
language
Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

A Learned Society spoke to me last week about what they could do to move to an open-access model. They currently receive about 100,000 EUR per year from their subscription/hybrid-OA publisher but were willing to jettison this (!) if they could go OA with no author fees. The problem was that implementing a new business model was a total pain.

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

After last week's post on APCs, some further musings. Following Kathleen Fitzpatrick's [work on generous thinking](https://jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu/title/generous-thinking) and the importance of community for the academy, I was [advocating for the importance of the mission-driven nature of the publishers](/2019/09/19/the-problems-of-unit-costs-per-article/) that we choose infrastructurally to support.

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

Every five minutes or so, someone tries to come up with a cost-per-article figure for academic publishing. In the past, I've tried to do it too. But more and more I find myself wanting to resist the temptation. Not only because the data collection takes forever, but because the figures that I would produce, from my organisation, would likely not be cross-applicable to another organisation.

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

There's [an article](https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/09/new-deals-could-help-scientific-societies-survive-open-access) out in The Times Higher Education Science Magazine (edit 11:38am) about Learned Societies and open access. As usual, it points out the thorny problem that Learned Societies derive revenue from subscriptions that they fear will be lost under an OA model. A few points spring to mind on this.

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

Here's an interesting one for me. The article processing charge (APC) model for open access is [attracting a lot of flack](https://items.ssrc.org/parameters/the-library-solution-how-academic-libraries-could-end-the-apc-scourge/). It's being called the "scourge" of the scholarly communications world and is criticized for perpetuating global epistemic inequality. I think this is right in many ways.

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

The [British Academy has responded](https://www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/sites/default/files/A_commentary_by_the_British_Academy_on_final_Plan_S-July_2019.pdf) to the revised Plan S consultation. It's nice of them to grudgingly accept there have been some improvements but I remain dismayed by the continued misrepresentation of Plan S within their documents.

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

An interesting discussion today with one of my senior publishing technology developers, Mauro Sanchez, led me to thinking about the rights of presentation and author rights to object to derogatory treatment of work published in scholarly journals. Namely: in the digital age, if one has a publication in a journal, what rights do the publishers have to change that platform and the underlying objects of publication?

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

Stare him in the eyes when you think he's folding You play your luck with the cards you're holding You throw a double six with the dice you're rolling You gotta test your luck to break the moulding Rummy and Patience and Texas hold 'em Blackjack and Poker and Solitaire loading Crossing all your fingers, here's to hoping Scattering chips that's the way you're rolling Cashing and acting and full-house holding Begging and stealing and cheating

Langues et littératureAnglais
Publié

This is an author’s accepted manuscript of an article accepted for publication in _LIT: Literature Interpretation Theory_. It is made available, here, [on a personal website with no embargo](/images/Eve-LIT-Egan.pdf) and will also be available in Birkbeck’s institutional repository 18 months after publication, as per Taylor & Francis’s OA policy at the time of acceptance.