Post on 28-Mar-2015
Starting an Open Access journal:Supporting new research fields with Open Access
Symposium "Visibility: building online scholarly presence“ – 26 October, 2012
Frank van LaerhovenEditor-in-Chief
International Journal of the Commonswww.thecommonsjournal.org
• Outline:• `Why a new journal?• Why open access?• How did we set up the journal?• What problems do we face? How do we try to solve them?
1. OJS (the system that manages our workflow) is a bit clunky – it is not very user friendly – authors, reviewers, and editors get frustrated and opt out
2. The business model is based on author fees rather than on a subscription system – authors are scared away by upfront costs
3. It is hard to get an impact factor – authors worrying about tenure won’t submit
4. The credibility of open access journals is contested – authors and reviewers won’t commit
5. Editorial Board is hard to motivate – ISI urges us to list figure heads, but due to prestige and credibility issues (?) many of those do not commit to working towards a better functioning journal
• Why a new journal on this topic?• 1985-2005: Well over 10,000 articles on the commons• Scattered over 2,000 (!) different journals• More than 250 journals published 10 or more articles on the topic
• Dispersion may hinder the accumulation of knowledge and the cross-fertilization that is crucial to the success of inter-disciplinary endeavors
• So, in 2007 our society (IASC) decided to dedicate a journal to the commons…
• Why open access?1. Knowledge is a commons!2. Scientists are hired brains paid for by tax resources – the
knowledge and insights that they generate should be treated as public goods that are NOT put behind pay walls
3. Practitioners and researchers in developing countries have no access to expensive conventional journals
• How did we set up the journal?• Via Igitur• Igitur has a portfolio of over 20 open access journals• http://www.uu.nl/university/library/NL/igitur/overzicht/Pages/defa
ult.aspx)
• We use Open Journal Systems (OJS) to manage the workflow• http://pkp.sfu.ca/?q=ojs
• What problems do we face? How do we try to solve them?1. OJS is a bit clunky – not very user friendly2. The business model is based on author fees rather than on a
license system3. It is hard to get an impact factor4. The credibility of open access journals is contested5. Editorial Board members are hard to motivate!
1. OJS is a bit clunky – not very user friendly• For authors, reviewers, and managing editors it is not self-evident
what is expected from them• They are not prompted through easy-to-understand steps• This leads to constant frustration with our users….• ….some of them opt out and turn to other venues…• Solution: Use a different system – e.g. a customized system that
we’d buy on the market• Downside: OJS is an open-source solution that is likely to develop
towards becoming the standard for OA• OJS comes with Igitur – we wouldn’t want to trade in Igitur for
support from one ICT guy, as Igitur’s support is priceless
2. The business model is based on author fees rather than on a license system
• Igitur charges us 750 Euros per year• Our copy-editor charges us 8 Euros per page• The managing editors do their work for free• We charge $10-$15 per page (depending on IASC membership) –
i.e. $200-$350 per article• Problem: Authors are directly faced with these costs…• …rather than libraries who’d pay a (steep) subscription fee under
the conventional business model • Solution: Work with Special Features (2,000 Euros lump sum)• Finding structural funding (from our society, or from other funders)
has proved difficult so far
3. It is hard to get an impact factor• The chicken-and-the-egg• Scopus & ISI require high-end output in order to allow you into
their indices…• …Authors won’t share their high-end work with you, unless you
are indexed by Scopus, and better still, ISI• Solution: a) Rely on our society members for input – i.e. senior members who
do not need to worry about tenureb) Rely on our editorial board members for input (less successful)• We managed to get into Scopus• Application with ISI is pending – an issue is the fluctuation in our
output numbers
4. The credibility of open access journals is contested• Predatory publishing – publishers predating on authors who are
pushed to publish or perish• See Jeffrey Beal• http://www.nature.com/news/predatory-publishers-are-corrupting-
open-access-1.11385• Our author fee model has led to an accusation of being a ‘vanity
press’..• ..this accusation came from an author whom we eventually
convinced with good arguments that we weren’t..• ..but what about those prospecting authors who do not express
their concern, and simply eliminate us as an possible venue for publication of their work?
4. The credibility of open access journals is contested• Solutions?• Quality indicators for open access journals – Theme of a recent
symposium in Rotterdam• http://www.surf.nl/en/actueel/Pages/Internationalscientificcommu
nityagreeonneedforqualityindicatorsfornew(OpenAccess)journals.aspx
4. The credibility of open access journals is contested• Solutions?I. Indicators regarding the transparency of the peer review process• Jelte Wicherts (UvT) developed a tool to assess transparency, based
on:– (1) peer-reviewed peer review, – (2) transparent editorial hierarchies, and – (3) online data publication.
• http://www.frontiersin.org/computational_neuroscience/10.3389/fncom.2012.00020/abstract
4. The credibility of open access journals is contested• Solutions?II. Indicators regarding the quality of the editorial board?• CWTS (Leiden) study shows a correlation between the average h-
indices of the EB members, and the impact factor of conventional, established journals
• Can this measure serve as a predictor of quality and subsequent success of OA journals?
• Problem: a) Causal direction: Does a good EB lead to better journals, or do
good journals attract better EB members?b) It is more important to get a hinge of what EB member do to
increase the quality of the journal (e.g. involvement in reviewing, publishing in the journal, participation in journal policy decisions)
5. Editorial Board members are hard to motivate• Our quest for indexation (ISI) led us to invite figure heads to our
board…• Getting all of them involved in running the journal is hard!• Solution: Kick everyone out that doesn’t contribute• Downside: As long as we are being assessed by ISI, it is good to have
them on our list• Future solutions that we consider
– Publish the number of reviews that EM members have been involved in– Publish the number of articles that EM members have submitted to the
journal– Create sections that certain EM members take responsibility of– Mandate participation in regular board meetings – Rotate EM membership
Thank you!
I hope there is still time for questions…(as this is slide #21…)