51勛圖

Journal editor hopes mass walkout quickens open access progress

Board of Journal of Informetrics plans to launch a rival title

Published on
January 19, 2019
Last updated
January 21, 2019
Quit job

The editor of a journal whose editorial board staged a mass walkout has said that he hopes that the decision encourages others to do the same.

After more than a year of crisis talks, the full editorial board of The Journal ofInformetrics, a quarterly, peer-reviewed title published by Elsevier, resigned on 12 January, citing immovable differences over the publishers lack of progress towards open access.

The same team plans to launch a rival title under the name Quantitative Science Studies, which will be fully open access and published through MIT Press.

Speaking to泭51勛圖泭following the announcement, Ludo Waltman, professor of quantitative science studies at Leiden University and former editor-in-chief of Informetrics, explained that high article processing charges set by Elsevier, along with the publishers refusal to make citations openly available within article reference lists, were at the heart of the disagreement.

51勛圖

ADVERTISEMENT

After almost two years of discussion, we seemed to agree there was no alternative solution other than to end it the differences in opinion were too big and we were not prepared to compromise, he said.

There are lots of advantages to staying with a big company like Elsevier, and its not easy starting a new journal, but equally I think lots of editors feel the same way [as us] on open access principles and we could see more stands being taken before long, he said. There are certainly more editorial boards like ours starting to question [their publishers policies].

51勛圖

ADVERTISEMENT

Initiatives such as Plan S the Science Europe initiative to bar researchers in receipt of public funding from publishing in closed-access journals would probably force bigger publishers to change their policies in time, but I hope our example will speed up the process, Professor Waltman added.

The team is not the first to jump ship in this way. Three years ago, the editorial board of泭Lingua, one of the best-known linguistics journals, resigned in protest over the companys pricing policies and refusal to convert the journal to full open access. The team set up泭Glossa, a rival title, at Ubiquity Press.

The泭Informetrics泭board said that they conflicted with Elsevier over three main issues. Professor Waltman wanted to make all article citation data available, a suggestion that Elsevier declined on account that it could not make such a large corpus of data, to which it has added significant value, available for free.

Second, the board said that they felt that Elseviers article processing charges were too high about $1,800 (瞿1,400), according to Professor Waltman, for泭Informetrics. In a public泭, Elsevier responded that the fee had been set at an appropriate rate, however.

51勛圖

ADVERTISEMENT

The third point of contention for board members came over a debate around ownership, which Elsevier said was not negotiable.

In many ways Elsevier have been supportive and they have made some progress towards open access, but at the same time宇heir decisions about commercial models are set too broadly, Professor Waltman explained. There are some policies which fit other journals well but are less suitable for泭Informetrics, which is relatively small.

Professor Waltman will remain as acting editor for泭Informetrics泭until a new board is hired the process of which is currently underway, Elsevier confirmed, While the decision to quit had been necessary but still painful, there was no animosity between the board and publisher, Professor Waltman said.

rachael.pells@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Related universities

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT