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Reserve grants for open access researchers, says report

Changing funding rules could shift the dial on open science, Australian paper argues

Published on
March 20, 2024
Last updated
March 19, 2024
reserved table
Source: iStock

Prior publication of non-paywalled papers should earn Australian researchers brownie points in grant applications, argues a new that suggests research funding bodies should establish grant schemes exclusively for scientists who only publish in open-access journals.

Report author Kristen Scicluna said such approaches could help break a prestige-driven business model which earned academic publishers astounding profits from the public purse.

If [grant recipients were] only able to publish in open-access journals, that...would increase their impact factor [as] more impactful research gets published in them, said Dr Scicluna, a postdoctoral research fellow at the Australia Institute thinktank. That would hopefully bring some citations away fromNature,泭Cell泭啊硃紳餃敕泭Science宇owards some more open-access journals that arent charging really crazy fees.

Its not going to happen overnight, because宇hat prestige factor [is] so entrenched. Thats what an academics whole career is based on their promotions and their career success. We need better mechanisms to provide that prestige to academics, instead of having it all hinge on the impact factor of the journals they publish in.

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Dr Scicluna said she had been astounded to discover, as a young medical researcher with a PhD in structural biology, that we had to pay to get our research published. Her report estimates that scholarly publishers earn about A$300 million (瞿154 million) a year from journal subscriptions in Australia alone.

Their Australian earnings rise to about A$1 billion when additional charges, including the extortionate fees for making articles open access which she likened to a tax on grants are factored in.

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The report says subscription costs are partly bankrolled through taxpayer-funded schemes such as the Research Support Programme, while article processing charges which publishers receive for removing articles from paywalls come from the A$2.4 billion or so allocated each year by the Australian Research Council, National Health and Medical Research Council and Medical Research Future Fund.

Dr Scicluna said academic publishing was one of the most profitable industries in the world, reaping some A$36 billion a year worldwide roughly as much as the global music industry.

She endorsed initiatives like Australian chief scientist Cathy Foleysproposalto give every Australian free access to scholarly journals, and EuropesPlan Scrusade to eliminate article paywalls. But some of these schemes conflicted with each other, and none prevented taxpayer funds ending up in the pockets of academic publishers.

Rather, some gave the publishers business model an unintentional boost, the report says. Publishing houses retain immense price-setting power as open access policies do nothing to reduce demand for their services, it says.

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Dr Scicluna said she was not aware of any research funder or authority in the world introducing a grant scheme reserved for open-access publishing, or giving open-access outlets the sort of grant assessment weightings normally awarded to high-impact journals.

The closest example she could find was thelottery systemused by the Health Research Council of New Zealand to allocate funding from its Explorer Grant scheme.

Her report also recommends more use of lottery-style funding allocations. However, such arrangements would be unlikely to influence the publication habits of researchers funded by universities themselves.

The lions share of university research funding, someA$5.7 billion a year, comes from non-government sources mostly universities earnings from international students.

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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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