Journal Open Access and Plan S: Solving Problems or Shifting Burdens?
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Kamerlin, Shina Caroline Lynn; David J. Allen; Bas de Bruin; Etienne Derat & Henrik Urdal (2021) Journal Open Access and Plan S: Solving Problems or Shifting Burdens?, Development and Change. DOI: 10.1111/dech.12635.
This article interrogates the impact of funder Open Access mandates, in particular Plan S, on scholarly communication practices, setting these developments in the context of the history of scholarly communication and current reactions by researchers to Plan S. The article raises concerns about the likely negative effects of such mandates on key features of scholarly publishing and research practice.
This academic thought piece provides an overview of the history of, and
current trends in, publishing practices in the scientific fields known
to the authors (chemical sciences, social sciences and humanities), as
well as a discussion of how open access mandates such as Plan S from
cOAlition S will affect these practices. It begins by summarizing the
evolution of scientific publishing, in particular how it was shaped by
the learned societies, and highlights how important quality assurance
and scientific management mechanisms are being challenged by the recent
introduction of ever more stringent open access mandates. The authors
then discuss the various reactions of the researcher community to the
introduction of Plan S, and elucidate a number of concerns: that it will
push researchers towards a pay‐to‐publish system which will inevitably
create new divisions between those who can afford to get their research
published and those who cannot; that it will disrupt collaboration
between researchers on the different sides of cOAlition S funding; and
that it will have an impact on academic freedom of research and
publishing. The authors analyse the dissemination of, and responses to,
an open letter distributed and signed in reaction to the introduction of
Plan S, before concluding with some thoughts on the potential for
evolution of open access in scientific publishing.
Read the article here (Open Access)