Goldsmiths College, University of London, has announced the launch of a new university press. According to the Bookseller website, the press will seek to publish unconventional projects. Although the press is conceived as being “digital-first” in its orientation, it will also produce print works. In terms of its business model, press director Sarah Kember says that the Press intends to “combine green open access with a fair and varied pricing model in order to avoid the exploitation of authors as well as readers.”
In June, University College, another constituent college of the University of London, launched an Open Access Press, which you can read about here.
Author Archives: Katy Nelson
UVicSpace: Karen Courtney
Our next researcher is Karen Courtney. Dr. Courtney is an assistant professor in the School of Health Information Science. Dr. Courtney is the co-author of many articles in the field of health systems research.
Dr. Courtney’s UVic Space collection can be found here.
If you are interested in having the library add your work to UVicSpace, please contact the IR librarian Katy Nelson at katnel@uvic.ca
UVicSpace: Hélène Cazes
Our next researcher is Hélène Cazes. Dr. Cazes is a professor in the Department of French, Director of the Program of Medieval Studies and the coordinator of the Humanities Diploma Program.
Dr. Cazes was the recipient of 2013 Faculty of Humanites Award for Research Excellence and has authored and edited many books including Histoires d’enfants : représentations et discours de l’enfance sous l’Ancien Régime.
Dr. Cazes talks about her research on the Faces of UVic Research Youtube channel here.
Dr. Cazes’s UVic space collection can be found here.
If you are interested in having the library add your work to UVicSpace, please contact the IR librarian Katy Nelson at katnel@uvic.ca
UVicSpace: Elizabeth Borycki
Our next UVic researcher is Elizabeth Borycki. Dr. Borycki is associate professor in the School of Health Information Science. She came to UVic in 2005 and has co-authored a vast number of articles in the area of health informatics.
Dr. Borycki’s UVic space collection can be found here.
If you are interested in having the library add your work to UVicSpace, please contact the IR librarian Katy Nelson at katnel@uvic.ca
UVic Space: Jessica Ball
Our next UVic researcher is Jessica Ball. Dr. Ball is a professor in the School of Child and Youth Care. She was the coordinator of the First Nations Partnership Programs from 2001-2011 and she has authored more than 120 journal articles, monographs and book chapters.
Dr. Ball talks about her research on the Faces of UVic Research YouTube channel here.
Dr. Ball’s UVic Space Collection can be found here.
If you are interested in having the library add your work to the repository, please contact the IR librarian Katy Nelson at katnel@uvic.ca
UVic Space: Sibylle Artz
Our first researcher is Sibylle Artz, professor and former director of the School of Child and Youth Care. Dr. Artz was chosen as Academic of the Year by the Confederation of University Faculty Associations of British Columbia in 1998. She is also the editor of the International Journal of Child, Youth and Family Studies.
Dr. Artz’s UVic Space collection can be viewed here.
If you are interested in having the library add your work to the repository, please contact the IR librarian Katy Nelson at katnel@uvic.ca
New Digital Repository Content
Over the summer we have been adding faculty publications to UVic Space, our institutional repository. We have added work by 21 researchers and will be continuing to add to our collection.
Throughout the next weeks, we will be highlighting each of these scholars on this blog.
If you are interested in having the library add your work to the repository, please contact the IR librarian Katy Nelson at katnel@uvic.ca
Some perspectives on “predatory publishing”
Predatory open access publishing is a model where journals charge publication fees and provide minimal peer review or quality control for their authors. The term “predatory publishing” was popularized by Jeffrey Beall, librarian at the University of Colorado, Denver. Beall maintains a list of predatory publishers (last updated on July 27, 2015), who meet the criteria set out in this document.
The list focuses entirely on Open Access publishers and, in a 2013 article, Beall posits that while “the open-access (OA) movement purports to be about making scholarly content open-access, its true motives are much different. The OA movement is an anti-corporatist movement that wants to deny the freedom of the press to companies it disagrees with. The movement is also actively imposing onerous mandates on researchers, mandates that restrict individual freedom.”
The list has been a topic of much discussion in scholarly communications since its first publication in 2010. Below are some highlights from recent discussions.
In March, two librarians at City University of New York, Monica Berger and Jill Cirasella published “Beyond Bealle’s List”, which was reposted on the London School of Economics blog.
The authors point out that deceptive journal practices predate the OA movement, that there are mediocre subscription-based journals and many that charge author-side fees. They note that even well respected journals accept very problematic submissions (the authors draw attention to the Lancet’s article linking autism with childhood vaccines and Alan Sokal’s hoax article published in Social Text). They also point to recent work which suggests that Beall’s work often conflates poor quality and predatory. The authors note that the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) has recently changed their inclusion criteria to weed out predatory publishers. Berger and Cirasella also point to a rubric devised by two Grand Valley State Librarians that allows scholars to evaluate journals.
Over at the scholarly kitchen blog, Rick Anderson, Associate Dean for Collections and Scholarly Communication at the University of Utah, has questioned whether the term “predatory publishing” is still useful. He notes, along with others, that Beall “only examines one kind of predation… What about toll-access publishers that jump on the OA bandwagon “just for the fees”?… What about publishers who simply do an unconscionably poor job of fulfilling their obligations to authors, or who unethically leverage their monopoly power to maximize revenue at the expense of libraries-a practice some characterize as "predatory pricing"? And what about the authors who intentionally use the services of fraudulent publishers in order to deceive their colleagues or employers, or who engage in dishonest manipulation of the peer-review process? Aren't they "predators" as well?”
In place of the term “predatory”, Anderson suggests switching to the term “scholarly bad faith” which would encapsulate all this sort of behavior.
On the Digital Science blog, Phill Jones suggests that predatory publishing may be a “symptom of global information inequality.”
When publishing research, scholars should also be aware that credible journals can either be "hijacked" by third parties and that reputable journals can be sold to publishers who may not maintain editorial standards.