From: Colin Steele <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Sun, May 20, 2018 at 7:52 PM

And the article below links to the eight-page British Academy position
paper. Note the comment about impacting young academics at the end of the
article-  there are numerous examples that could be cited of young or early
career academics publishing with major British and European publishers in
limited editions of 2 to 300 copies at very high cost, which restricts
access and content to the material in their books. But of course they will
have then achieved the metric gold standard of book publication, however
small an edition, whereby the actual physical production is deemed more
important than effective distribution of its content. American University
presses are usually an exception to this rule in terms of pricing.


Best Colin



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Times Higher Education <https://www.timeshighereducation.com/>
British Academy questions REF’s open-access deadline for books

Scholarly body warns mandate could ‘undermine the UK’s place in the global
research community’

May 19, 2018

   - By Rachael Pells
   <https://www.timeshighereducation.com/author/rachael-pells>



Source: iStock

A 2021 deadline for all academic books to be published in open-access
format if they are to be submitted to the UK’s research excellence
framework may be unrealistic, the British Academy has warned.

The national body for humanities and social sciences said that it was still
not clear how the requirement – first announced in December 2016 but
recently the subject of increasing debate
<https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/ref-open-access-requirement-books-worth-outlay>
– could be implemented without incurring significant additional costs for
universities or “undermin[ing] the UK’s place in the global research
community”.


REF open-access requirement for books ‘worth the outlay’
<https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/ref-open-access-requirement-books-worth-outlay>

It called for “full consultation on any concrete proposals for extending
open access to monographs, without which it would be neither fair nor wise
to impose new rules”.

Already, journal articles submitted to the REF must be made freely
available within three months of publication, and the UK’s funding councils
propose to extend this requirement to monographs for the 2027 assessment,
the census period for which will follow the 2021 exercise.

In a position paper
<https://www.britac.ac.uk/sites/default/files/British_Academy_paper_on_Open_access_and_monographs-May_2018.pdf>,
the academy says that it is not clear how the book-processing charges
associated with open-access publishing will be funded. A recent study
estimated that these averaged £7,500 per title, equivalent to a UK-wide
cost of £19.2 million a year. Although research funders might provide
support for this, the academy highlights that most monographs “do not
derive from externally funded projects but are the fruit of the research
time of regularly employed academic staff”.

It has been suggested that funding could come from institutions’
quality-related research income, but the academy says that “any new funding
stream to cover the costs of open-access books must be in addition to, and
not drawn from, existing support”. “Otherwise, [institutions] would be
being penalised financially for submitting books to the REF,” the paper
says.
------------------------------

The academy expresses concern about the implications for “crossover” books,
which are based on original research but also sell thousands of copies in
high street bookshops, and for academics who publish with international
companies, which do not always offer open access.

Until these issues have been resolved, the paper says, the “only options”
are to “either to postpone these rules (or make them non-compulsory), until
the shape of the publishing landscape becomes clearer, or else to treat a
high percentage of books as ‘exceptions’” to the policy.

Even once clear rules and exceptions are in place, the academy says, “there
is a danger that the proposed REF policy will undermine the UK’s place in
the global research community”. Requiring books to be published in
open-access format “threatens to reduce the reputation of UK scholarship as
a whole and to promote – and reward – a culture of intellectual insularity”.

The academy argues that British universities might be reluctant to hire
academics from overseas if their books are published in regions without
open-access mandates, while UK scholars’ publishing options, and hence
their international career prospects, might be reduced.

Mary Morgan, vice-president for publications and chair of the British
Academy’s open-access working group, said that she was “particularly
concerned” that requiring books to be freely available could disadvantage
young and early career academics. Such young scholars would face a bind
because they might lack the funding for book-processing charges but would
also be aware that publishing in a format that is not open access would
make their output ineligible for the REF – and thus unattractive to
employers.

“We would expect there to be a high level of consultation about the policy
and the means of delivering it before any mandate or deadline is set. This
is essential if the policy is to have credibility and efficacy,” said
Professor Morgan, professor of history and philosophy of economics at the
London School of Economics.

---------------------------------------------

Colin Steele
Emeritus Fellow

ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences

The Australian National University

Room 3.31, Beryl Rawson Building #13

Acton, ACT, 2601
Australia



P: + 61 2 6125 8983

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