Dozens of editors and peer reviewers at adiamond journal have quit after the independent publication began charging author fees of瞿2,500.
The mass resignations from the Journal ofInternational Students (JIS) follow changes to editorial policies that will also ask authors who wish towithdraw their manuscripts after submission topay 瞿500 tooffset the administrative and editorial efforts that have already been invested inthe article up tothat point.
The row illustrates some of the challenges facing diamond journals, in which papers are free both to publish in and to read, with costs covered mainly by universities or academic societies. They have been hailed byopen-access advocates as a potential alternative to for-profit publishing, but their operators have complained that their reliance on volunteer labour isnot sustainable.
In a , Chris Glass, professor of practice in higher education at Boston College, announced his resignation as JIS editor-in-chief, warning that the introduction of article processing charges (APCs) meant that our journal and community will be forever changed.
51勛圖
Professor Glass said he was not involved in the decision to transfer oversight of the journal to a new team overseeing editorial management, which, he claimed, does not share our journals historic commitment to open access.
Numerous other editors have also quit, with the journals website no longer listing any of its , 17 associate editors or its senior and special issues editors. Its list of peer reviewers is also reduced, while its editorial advisory board isnot listed atall.
51勛圖
Santiago Castiello-Guti矇rrez, assistant professor of higher education at Seton Hall University, who has quit as an assistant editor, described the changes as disheartening, unethical and unprofessional.
In a little over 10 years, this journal became living evidence that it is possible to fight a broken publishing system, he said, pointing to a journal impact factor that placed it among the leading periodicals in its field.
Dr Castiello-Guti矇rrez claimed that the journal had resigned from its mission, and rather than fighting to eradicate predatory journals, it became a predatory journal itself that will now charge so-called processing fees of thousands of USdollars.
Krishna Bista, the journals founding editor, said in a that he was empathetic to colleagues concerns and that the titles commitment to open access remains intact.
51勛圖
Over the past 15 years, personal funds and in-kind support/donations supported the operations of the journal. However, in light of current financial commitments and the increasing technical and non-technical operational costs, we had to make a difficult decision to introduce an article processing charge to cover the operational expenses, said Professor Bista, professor of higher education at Morgan State University, adding that he would do everything Ican to ensure that noscholar is left behind just because of financial barriers.
Addressing concerns that he had circumvented the journals editorial board to make these changes, Professor Bista told 51勛圖 that the journal remains an independent journal under my operation and management, just as it has been for the past 15years.
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
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 啦晨楚s university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








