Stevan and others, response interspersed.

Arthur

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Stevan Harnad
Sent: Tuesday, 5 January 2016 10:21 AM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Re: Quo vadere?

 

On Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 5:19 PM, Arthur Sale <[email protected]> wrote:

 

Christian Gutknecht <[email protected]> wrote:

I really like the idea to let researchers feel that subscription is an outdated 
model. And an easy way to do that without upsetting them too much, is to cancel 
subscriptions and get rid of the Big Deals.

I don’t have access to the raw data now apart from knowing that we fulfill 
13,000+ requests a year, but the University of Tasmania has operated a free 
unlimited-quantity service for 15 years, funded pay-per-view centrally (ie in 
replacement for subscriptions). 

 

Let me make sure I understand this, Arthur: Are you saying UTas has cancelled 
all journal subscriptions, and has just just pay per view?

[ahjs] Of course not. That would be the height of stupidity until open access 
is 100%. But it has enabled us to reduce our subscriptions significantly to 
those that are economically justifiable, and to measure this against access 
rates. Freed up money can be used for pay per view, and the economics actually 
do stack up, Stevan. Nobody reads paper journals any more. For one thing by the 
time they get to Tasmania they are obsolete.

 

My attention has been drawn to a Library report: ‘From 2014 to June 2015 
researchers requested more than 12,000 articles from over 6,000 journals not 
held by our Library at an approximate cost of $220,000.  Document Delivery 
represents extraordinary value for money in enabling access to depth and 
breadth of information resources. In order for the Library to subscribe to each 
of these titles, this could potentially cost over $3 million (calculated on an 
average price of $500 per journal title per year).’

 

If I do the calculation for readers of this list, that’s the equivalent of $AUD 
37/journal. Note that the University of Tasmania is a wide-scope university, 
indeed the only one in the State of Tasmania, and we need access to many 
journals of interest to one or a few researchers working in diverse fields. 
Those journals of wide interest and read by many remain subscribed or available 
open access. We recognize this as transitional, but the transition is taking a 
long time, as you know. Best wishes, and strength to the open access movement. 
We do our bit in making our research open access as far as the copyright police 
allow.

 

 

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