[Air-L] open-access is the future: boycott locked-down academic journals

McLaughlin, Lisa M. Dr. mclauglm at muohio.edu
Fri Feb 8 13:57:35 PST 2008


I'm curious to know: 1) if/how this example presents a sustainable model;  2) if/how it may be replicable in other fields and contexts involving academic publication and distribution.

I've got no hidden agenda is asking these questions (as in offering a point of disagreement). I'm interested because of my current involvement in a project centering on finding/creating sustainable (shall I say "value-added"?) models for production and distribution of independent media.

Regards,

Lisa

On 2/8/08 4:44 PM, "Gilles Frydman" <gfrydman at acor.org> wrote:

There is an amazing precedent in the field of mathematics publishing,
demonstrating that if you build it, they will come!  On their own.

Look at the story of Grigori Perelman, who received the Fields Medal
(the highest prize in mathematics) for solving the Poincare
Conjecture. He published his solution to this 100 years old problem in
3 articles over an 8-months period in 2002-2003. He specifically
published the 3 articles  ONLY on arXiv, the open-access repository of
e-prints in Physics, Mathematics, Computer Science, Quantitative
Biology and Statistics. (for background information on arXiv.org: http://people.ccmr.cornell.edu/~ginsparg/blurb/)

His experience has transformed completely how mathematicians think
about peer-reviewed publications, creating a big push for open-access.

--
Gilles Frydman
ACOR.org


On Feb 8, 2008, at 4:23 PM, Christian Nelson wrote:

> That's A question, not the only one. As I noted before, if you build
> it, they will not come. Not unless you lure the big names away from
> the current journals, and that isn't going to happen on its own.
>
> On Feb 8, 2008, at 4:13 PM, Jimmy Wales wrote:
>
>> The question is:  "Can we find sustainable models for the
>> publication and distribution of
>> academic content that are also consistent with the ideals of free
>> distribution and open access."
>>
>> I think the answer is not just yes, but a resounding yes.
>>
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