Academic Journals are a Lucrative Scam – and We’re Determined to Change That
upstart writes:
Academic journals are a lucrative scam - and we're determined to change that:
'It's never been more evident that for-profit publishing simply does not align with the aims of scholarly inquiry.' Photograph: agefotostock/AlamyView image in fullscreen'It's never been more evident that for-profit publishing simply does not align with the aims
Giant publishers are bleeding universities dry, with profit margins that rival Google's. So we decided to start our own
If you've ever read an academic article, the chances are that you were unwittingly paying tribute to a vast profit-generating machine that exploits the free labour of researchers and siphons off public funds.
The annual revenues of the "big five" commercial publishers - Elsevier, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, Springer Nature, and SAGE - are each in the billions, and some have staggering profit margins approaching 40%, surpassing even the likes of Google. Meanwhile, academics do almost all of the substantive work to produce these articles free of charge: we do the research, write the articles, vet them for quality and edit the journals.
Not only do these publishers not pay us for our work; they then sell access to these journals to the very same universities and institutions that fund the research and editorial labour in the first place. Universities need access to journals because these are where most cutting-edge research is disseminated. But the cost of subscribing to these journals has become so exorbitantly expensive that some universities are struggling to afford them. Consequently, many researchers (not to mention the general public) remain blocked by paywalls, unable to access the information they need. If your university or library doesn't subscribe to the main journals, downloading a single paywalled article on philosophy or politics can cost between 30 and 40.
The commercial stranglehold on academic publishing is doing considerable damage to our intellectual and scientific culture. As disinformation and propaganda spread freely online, genuine research and scholarship remains gated and prohibitively expensive. For the past couple of years, I worked as an editor of Philosophy & Public Affairs, one of the leading journals in political philosophy. It was founded in 1972, and it has published research from renowned philosophers such as John Rawls, Judith Jarvis Thomson and Peter Singer. Many of the most influential ideas in our field, on topics from abortion and democracy to famine and colonialism, started out in the pages of this journal. But earlier this year, my co-editors and I and our editorial board decided we'd had enough, and resigned en masse.
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