[GOAL] On sponsorship, transparency, scholarly publishing, and open access
Richard Poynder
richard.poynder at cantab.net
Tue Jul 18 10:33:36 BST 2017
Sponsorship in the research and library communities is pervasive today, and
scholarly publishers are some of the most generous providers of it. While
the benefits of this sponsorship to the research community at large are
debatable, publishers gain a great deal of soft power from dispensing money
in this way. And they use this soft power to help them contain, control and
shape the changes scholarly communication is undergoing, often in ways that
meet their needs more than the needs of science and of scientists.
This sponsorship also often takes place without adequate transparency.
These are the kinds of issues explored in this (pdf) document
http://bit.ly/2taOuoL, which includes some examples of publisher
sponsorship, and the associated problems of non-transparency that often go
with it. In particular, there is a detailed case study of a series of
interviews conducted by Library Journal with leading OA advocates that was
sponsored by Dove Medical Press.
Amongst those interviewed was the de facto leader of the OA movement Peter
Suber. Suber gave three separate interviews to LJ, but not once was he
informed when invited that the interviews were sponsored, or that they would
be flanked with ads for Dove - even though he made it clear after the first
interview that he was not happy to be associated with the publisher in this
way.
http://bit.ly/2taOuoL
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