Harvard University says it can't afford journal publishers' prices

Harvard Univer­sity says it can’t afford jour­nal publis­hers’ prices

Univer­sity wants scien­tists to make their rese­arch open access and resign from publi­ca­ti­ons that keep arti­cles behind paywalls

A graduation ceremony at Harvard University
A memo from Harvard’s faculty advi­sory coun­cil said major scien­ti­fic publis­hers had made scho­larly commu­ni­ca­tion 'fiscally unsus­tai­na­ble’. Photo­graph: Corbis

Exas­pe­ra­ted by rising subs­crip­tion costs char­ged by acade­mic publis­hers, Harvard Univer­sity has encou­ra­ged its faculty members to make their rese­arch freely avai­la­ble through open access jour­nals and to resign from publi­ca­ti­ons that keep arti­cles behind paywalls.

A memo from Harvard Library to the univer­sity’s 2,100 teaching and rese­arch staff called for action after warning it could no longer afford the price hikes impo­sed by many large jour­nal publis­hers, which bill the library around $3.5m a year.

The extra­or­di­nary move thrusts one of the world’s wealt­hi­est and most pres­ti­gi­ous insti­tu­ti­ons into the centre of an incre­a­singly fraught debate over access to the results of acade­mic rese­arch, much of which is funded by the taxpayer.

The outcome of Harvard’s deci­sion to take on the publis­hers will be watched closely by major univer­si­ties around the world and is likely to prompt others to follow suit.

The memo from Harvard’s faculty advi­sory coun­cil said major publis­hers had crea­ted an «unte­na­ble situ­a­tion» at the univer­sity by making scho­larly inter­ac­tion «fiscally unsus­tai­na­ble» and «acade­mi­cally restric­tive», while drawing profits of 35% or more. Prices for online access to arti­cles from two major publis­hers have incre­a­sed 145% over the past six years, with some jour­nals costing as much as $40,000, the memo said.

More than 10,000 acade­mics have alre­ady joined a boycott of Else­vier, the huge Dutch publis­her, in protest at its jour­nal pricing and access poli­cies. Many univer­sity libra­ries pay more than half of their jour­nal budgets to the publis­hers Else­vier, Sprin­ger and Wiley.

Robert Darn­ton, direc­tor of Harvard Library told the Guar­dian: "I hope that other univer­si­ties will take simi­lar action. We all face the same para­dox. We faculty do the rese­arch, write the papers, refe­ree papers by other rese­ar­chers, serve on edito­rial boards, all of it for free … and then we buy back the results of our labour at outra­ge­ous prices.

«The system is absurd, and it is inflic­ting terri­ble damage on libra­ries. One year’s subs­crip­tion to The Jour­nal of Compa­ra­tive Neuro­logy costs the same as 300 mono­graphs. We simply cannot go on paying the incre­ase in subs­crip­tion prices. In the long run, the answer will be open-access jour­nal publis­hing, but we need concer­ted effort to reach that goal.»

In tradi­ti­o­nal jour­nal publis­hing, rese­ar­chers submit arti­cles to editors who send them out for peer review, a task that is usually unpaid. The final versi­ons of the arti­cles are then format­ted and sold back to univer­sity libra­ries. Open access comes in vari­ous guises, but one model requi­res authors to pay to have their arti­cles publis­hed and made freely avai­la­ble to anyone.

Accor­ding to the Harvard memo, jour­nal subs­crip­ti­ons are now so high that to conti­nue them «would seri­ously erode collec­tion efforts in many other areas, alre­ady compro­mi­sed». The memo asks faculty members to encou­rage their profes­si­o­nal orga­ni­sa­ti­ons to take control of scho­larly publis­hing, and to consi­der submit­ting their work to open access jour­nals and resig­ning from edito­rial boards of jour­nals that are not open access.

It adds that the library must insist on trans­pa­rent contracts that prevent univer­si­ties from discus­sing in public the fees they pay certain publis­hers.

In a state­ment to the Guar­dian, Else­vier said: "The Harvard Faculty Advi­sory Coun­cil letter does not specify any speci­fic publis­her. We have a good rela­ti­ons­hip with the Harvard libra­ries and have recently conclu­ded an agre­e­ment we beli­eve works for them as it gives them the flexi­bi­lity to choose the titles they want.

«We do not beli­eve that the facts in the letter which relate to price incre­a­ses pertain to Else­vier. Else­vi­er’s average print list price incre­a­ses have consis­tently been among the lowest in the industry for the past seve­ral years, avera­ging around 5%.»

The state­ment conclu­ded: «We beli­eve Harvard will conti­nue to see the value in publis­hing in Else­vier jour­nals, which include a range of access opti­ons, and contri­bu­ting as editors.»

David Pros­ser, execu­tive direc­tor of Rese­arch Libra­ries UK (RLUK), said: "Harvard has one of the richest libra­ries in the world. If Harvard can’t afford to purchase all the jour­nals their rese­ar­chers need, what hope do the rest of us have?

«There’s always been a problem with this being seen as a library budget issue. The memo from Harvard makes clear that it’s bigger than that. It’s at the heart of educa­tion and rese­arch. If you can’t get access to the lite­ra­ture, it hurts rese­arch.»

RLUK nego­ti­a­ted new contracts with Else­vier and Wiley last year after the group thre­a­te­ned to cancel large subs­crip­ti­ons to the publis­hers. The new deal, orga­ni­sed on behalf of 30 member libra­ries, is expec­ted to save UK insti­tu­ti­ons more than £20m.

«The better deals have given us a little breat­hing space, but they don’t solve the problem. There is a long-term struc­tu­ral problem with this market that isn’t going to be solved that simply, » Pros­ser said.

Heat­her Joseph, execu­tive direc­tor of the Scho­larly Publis­hing and Acade­mic Resour­ces Coali­tion, a US-based inter­na­ti­o­nal library members­hip orga­ni­sa­tion, said other univer­si­ties may follow Harvard’s lead.

«High­ligh­ting the role of the faculty is exac­tly what we need to do. Libra­ries have been trying to ring the alarm bell about this for a while, but it’s the faculty members who are the produ­cers and consu­mers of the arti­cles. They have got the keys to making signi­fi­cant change in this market. Having Harvard call this out in front of the faculty is a very signi­fi­cant move.»

She added: «Other univer­si­ties are likely to follow Harvard’s exam­ple on this. If it starts at a univer­sity with the stature of Harvard, they will take a long hard look at whet­her this is somet­hing that makes sense for them to do as well. People watch Harvard. There’s no grey area there.»

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http://www.guar­dian.co.uk/science/2012/apr/24/harvard-univer­sity-jour­nal-publis­hers-prices