The Case for Diamond Open Access
“As editors of one of our field’s leading journals, we feel a strong responsibility to help build collective momentum towards a better arrangement: a publishing model that no longer wastes massive amounts of public resources feeding profits to private corporations, secures editorial independence against the pressures of profit-making and makes research available to everyone, free of charge.”
That’s Arash Abizadeh (McGill), writing in The Guardian about the mass editorial exodus from Philosophy and Public Affairs earlier this year.
He makes clear the problems with the current dominant form of academic publishing:
Academics do almost all of the substantive work to produce these articles free of charge: we do the research, write the articles, vet them for quality and edit the journals. Not only do these publishers not pay us for our work; they then sell access to these journals to the very same universities and institutions that fund the research and editorial labour in the first place. Universities need access to journals because these are where most cutting-edge research is disseminated. But the cost of subscribing to these journals has become so exorbitantly expensive that some universities are struggling to afford them. Consequently, many researchers (not to mention the general public) remain blocked by paywalls, unable to access the information they need.
The “obvious alternative,” he says is that
universities, libraries, and academic funding agencies can cut out the intermediary and directly fund journals themselves, at a far lower cost. This would remove commercial pressures from the editorial process, preserve editorial integrity and make research accessible to all. The term for this is “diamond” open access, which means the publishers charge neither authors, editors, nor readers (this is how our new journal will operate). Librarians have been urging this for years.
The change, he says, is important not just for academics, but for society: “a revolution in the publishing landscape could also help stem the tide of disinformation and propaganda in the public sphere.”
But there’s an obstacle:
Academics still face a massive collective action problem: we want a new arrangement but each of us, individually, is strongly incentivised to stick with the status quo. Career advancement depends heavily on publishing in journals with established name recognition and prestige, and these journals are often owned by commercial publishers.
What happened with Philosophy and Public Affairs and The Journal of Political Philosophy (here) is—perhaps–the beginning of a change to the status quo, but as Abizadeh suggests, other journals need to undergo similar changes to “build collective momentum”. Which journals should be next?
It is good that the problematic costs of academic publishing are being presented to the general public. The article makes it sound like the author and the editors of P&PA are the first to open a diamond open access journal. While space in these op-eds is limited, it seems like it would’ve been good to acknowledge that there are other journals that are diamond open access, some of which have been operating for a while.
I think the product lines from The Sosa Family Inc. should be next. That certainly can help build collective momentum.
Not to harsh obvious functional Vajrayana Journal Editing:
So the journal takes a bath on hosting, tries for organizational sponsors c.f. libraries (or campus/community tempeh or edamame or tofu or okra curry subscriptions,) but also doesn’t compensate reviewers or grad students in politics or take raises to nerf the TeXchain and other entity data science or ETH, emit challenges to e.g. pop or internal medicine, standards orgs, and industrial training, or run emergent interests collections, and emit active learning cards, AR, and wall scroll learning aids plus flash media? Editors just get a kibbutz for their tenure?
J. Political Philosophy would take a new fork every 11 years I imagine. J. Chaotic Evil 11 months.
Great article! This is clearly the right path forward. It would be excellent if this moment could be the start of a broader movement.
I’d love to see more prestigious journals published by the Big Five go diamond-open-access.
I might gently disagree with Arash Abizadeh that the main problem is philosophers as a group “incentivised to stick with the status quo” because “career advancement depends heavily on publishing in journals with established name recognition and prestige.” Ergo is diamond-open-access (right? I could be wrong but I think it is) and established its prestige (when you build it they will come). Now that it’s considered to have prestige, it gets submissions.
The bigger obstacle, I think, is locating those “alternative funding sources.” At FPQ we mainly rely on Canada’s SSHRC which usually offers funding through the Aid to Scholarly Journals grant competition, permitting us to pay a student assistant and a freelance copy editor. But that’s not guaranteed and when we first started the journal, SSHRC wasn’t even holding the competition, so founders knit the money for the journal together from each of our individual research funds. At a time when many universities can’t seem to cut the humanities fast enough and tenured jobs are not replaced, I wonder if the possibilities for alternative funding sources are narrowing rather than promising.
As one of the editors of a journal that, since its inception in 2004, has been publishing according to a diamond open access model, I’m delighted to see more and more journals follow suit. One way for “universities, libraries, and academic funding agencies [to] cut out the intermediary and directly fund journals themselves” is the Lyrasis Open Access Community Investment Program (OACIP): https://www.lyrasis.org/content/Pages/oacip.aspx — we definitely need more initiatives like this.
“[U]niversities, libraries, and academic funding agencies can cut out the intermediary and directly fund journals themselves, at a far lower cost,” welcome on board, finally. This is what we from the Global South have been doing for decades.