In a recent 'Insights 'article, Gareth J Johnson reports on research designed to determine the reasons that so many authors still fail to embrace open access (OA) publishing, despite many years of advocacy on the part of a dedicated community of OA practitioners. To answer this question, Johnson interviewed OA practitioners at 81 UK universities, seeking their insights into the attitudes of academic authors. In response to Johnson’s findings, this paper proposes three categories of authorial resistance, questions the effectiveness of asking third parties to interpret the thinking of authors (particularly when those third parties have a vested interest in the authors’ adoption of OA) and critiques some of the assumptions underlying the infor...
The online age has made powerful new benefits for research possible, but these benefits entail a pro...
The Open Access (OA) movement regards OA modes of disseminating research as the unequivocal future o...
Open access (OA) has been shaping and benefitting the scientific community for years now, but this n...
This paper presents a critical re-consideration of the problems in achieving a greater embrace of th...
<p>The vision expressed by LIBER in its strategy plan is that Open Access will be the predominant fo...
In this chapter Alma Swan draws from the surveys undertaken by Key Perspectives Ltd into researchers...
Open access publishing (OA) not only removes price and permission restrictions to academic research,...
© 2017 ASIS&T While there is significant progress with policy and a lively debate regarding the pote...
Background: Many of the discussions surrounding Open Access (OA) revolve around how it affects pub...
In calling for research papers to be made freely available open access advocates promised that doing...
This paper presents the findings from a survey study of UK academics and their publishing behaviour....
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
Open Humanities Press (OHP) is the first open access publisher devoted to contemporary critical theo...
Dan Penny, Head of Insights at Nature Publishing Group and Palgrave Macmillan, shares findings from ...
The online age has made powerful new benefits for research possible, but these benefits entail a pro...
The Open Access (OA) movement regards OA modes of disseminating research as the unequivocal future o...
Open access (OA) has been shaping and benefitting the scientific community for years now, but this n...
This paper presents a critical re-consideration of the problems in achieving a greater embrace of th...
<p>The vision expressed by LIBER in its strategy plan is that Open Access will be the predominant fo...
In this chapter Alma Swan draws from the surveys undertaken by Key Perspectives Ltd into researchers...
Open access publishing (OA) not only removes price and permission restrictions to academic research,...
© 2017 ASIS&T While there is significant progress with policy and a lively debate regarding the pote...
Background: Many of the discussions surrounding Open Access (OA) revolve around how it affects pub...
In calling for research papers to be made freely available open access advocates promised that doing...
This paper presents the findings from a survey study of UK academics and their publishing behaviour....
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
With this paper, we hope to foster debate about the place of open access (OA) in scholarly publishin...
Open Humanities Press (OHP) is the first open access publisher devoted to contemporary critical theo...
Dan Penny, Head of Insights at Nature Publishing Group and Palgrave Macmillan, shares findings from ...
The online age has made powerful new benefits for research possible, but these benefits entail a pro...
The Open Access (OA) movement regards OA modes of disseminating research as the unequivocal future o...
Open access (OA) has been shaping and benefitting the scientific community for years now, but this n...