OPEN ACCESS: Introduction to OA Journal Publications an Open Access Scholarly Publishing Journal
OPEN ACCESS: Introduction to OA Journal “Publications” an Open Access Scholarly Publishing Journal by Alan Singleton -- distributed as email post to acrlframe@lists.ala.org So how is OA doing and who is writing about it? Latest issue of Publications is now out. Open Access has been around for quite a time now, and it's appropriate that an OA journal on publishing continues to keep an eye on it. The latest issue of Publications: the journal of academic publishing and communication certainly does that with a couple of articles. And remember, they are all OA, and I give the links so you can go straight there and read them if you wish. First up we have a review of the literature - what's it about and who's writing it (using Scopus as source). You will be shocked to know that the USA is the most prolific country, with over 30% of articles and UK trailing behind with about 13.4%. All other countries are, a bit, also-rans. No prizes for guessing the most prolific author - If I tell you his first name is Bo-Christer?... Steven Harnad comes in fourth. http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/1/htm And then we have an article looking more at content, at least as far as the Health Sciences are concerned, tracking what evidence has been found, and in what direction. Although most articles nowadays seem to start from the premise that OA is necessarily 'a good thing', and these are no exception, in the body of the article it is careful to point out where evidence is also either weak or contradictory. On citation impact, for example, it rather assumes OA is positive but points also to the caveats and studies by such as Phil Davis et al. http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/2/htm. The history and rise of OA seems to have acquired its own mythology - since I was one of the people responsible for one of the very first substantial OA (not called that then) journals in the 1990s, and founded for very different reasons, it's all mildly amusing, but we have to live with it... There is another pair of articles looking at Non-Native English Speakers publishing in English. As someone who has now edited or 'polished' getting on for 200 articles in English by Chinese researchers, I read these with interest. One is really based on a set of case studies, charting in detail the trials and tribulations of such researchers as they work their way through, and trying to draw some conclusions. Interestingly, he raises how some are questioning the fairness of these systems 'requiring' English/American English and wanting to 'uncouple' the language from its native speakers, and talking, without irony, about the 'transformationalist framework' of that particular school of thought. http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/6/htm, http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/5/htm. These days all major publishers will at least refer non-native speakers to places where they can get help. More may be needed, however, and James Cameron and Karen Englander, based partly on their own experience, make a call for more properly organized courses within universities, and outline the one in Mexico as an example. Given my own experience, I feel an editorial coming on... By the way, I do have an editorial in this issue, on a couple of aspects of one of my hobby-horses - peer review. http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/8/htm. For some reason it's not at the top of the contents list - as a new boy here I'll have to have a word with the publishers about that.We also have a bibliometric analysis of how co-authorship and exposure to 'international' journals e.g. those from USA and UK, can greatly assist visibility to authors from developing countries, in this case, specifically, Brazil - which may have wider implications for many other other countries. http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/4/htm. Lastly, we have a piece which at first sight is less about academic publishing than creative writing - but it's interesting to see whether there is any crossover. This explores what it calls 'implicit collaboration' or 'appropriation' in the context of the Creative Commons license. It recognizes that in some fields this would be considered 'plagiarism' but explores how creative works use and build on the works of others, sometimes with full acceptance, and sometimes controversially. It makes interesting and thought-provoking reading - although I'm left with the feeling that, in science, it's fine for someone to 'stand on the shoulders of giants' but it's not ok for them to falsely pretend to actually be that giant.. http://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/4/1/7/htm. That's all for now. Hope you enjoy at least browsing the articles. Hope to see you again in a few months. Alan Singleton Editor-in-Chief Publications Email: singleton@mdpi.com