I’m rather confused by this blog post.  If the argument is that Egypt should 
invest more in research and build greater safeguards to intellectual and 
academic freedom then I’m sure that we would all agree wholeheartedly.

However, it appears to be trying to make a point about Hindawi and for-profit 
OA publishing.  Here, for me, it fails.

The main argument is that as the most expensive APC Hindawi charges is high 
compared to academic salaries in Egypt there is a problem with for-profit OA 
publishing.  There are a number of points here.

1.  I know of no country where APCs are mainly paid from academic salaries.  In 
the same way that centrifuges, reagents, etc., etc. tend not to be paid for 
from salaries.  They are mainly paid from research grants and so the comparison 
to salaries strikes me as meaningless.  (Unless the situation is different in 
Egypt and all research equipment is paid for personally by researchers.)  Now, 
it may be that the highest APC Hindawi charges is out of reach of research 
grants, but let’s use a sensible metric.

2. The authors, no doubt to make an ideological point, have chosen the highest 
APC Hindawi charges.  It is easy to find journals published by Hindawi that 
charge APCs of a fifth of that quoted.  Four days’ salary for a professor 
rather than a month - if that were a meaningful metric.

3. Publishing is international - Not all companies price their products 
exclusively for a home market.  We shouldn’t be surprised when this happens in 
publishing.  (Although I note that there are papers published by Egyptian 
authors in Hindawi’s journals.)

4. For me, the most striking omission is that in asking the question ‘who 
benefits?’ and in focusing in on Egypt there is complete silence on the issue 
of Egyptian researchers (and citizens more widely) as readers.  The whole point 
of open access is to widen readership and to make papers available to all 
interested readers, not just to those who can afford subscriptions.  The papers 
published by Hindawi are now available to the intellectually curious in Egypt 
(as elsewhere).  These curious readers now have access to a corpus of material 
that they might never otherwise have been able to read.  I would have thought 
that deserved a mention in any discussion of ‘who benefits?’.  Unless the main 
driver was to make an ideological point against APCs rather than to answer the 
question.


So, it would appear that both Egyptian authors and readers, and international 
authors and readers, benefit from for-profit open access publishing.  Should 
there be more repositories? Of course.  Should Egyptian researchers use them 
more? Of course.  Should there be a wide variety of gold open access providers, 
including those that make no charge to authors? Of course.  Does the academic, 
and wider, community benefit from for-profit open access publishers? Of course!

(For full disclosure I would say that I have liked everybody I have met over 
the years who works for Hindawi and I admire how the company made the 
transition form subscription to open access publisher.)

David



On 10 Apr 2015, at 21:42, Heather Morrison 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

a blogpost by Jihane Salhab & Heather Morrison

Abstract

The highly successful Egypt-based open access publisher Hindawi is presented as 
a model of quality publishing and commercial success. However, this success is 
not accompanied by obvious benefits to Egypt’s own research and researchers. 
Even in the best-case scenario for academics in Egypt’s public university 
system, it would take three month’s salary for a full professor to pay the 
$1,500 USD OA APC of Hindawi’s high-end Disease Markers. Egypt’s largest public 
university, Cairo University, has no institutional repository. Fortunately for 
Egyptian researchers, there are open access journals that do not charge APCs, 
and not all open access repositories are institutional repositories. Open 
access may not be the most salient issue for Egyptian researchers at any rate. 
It is not clear that the pre-revolutionary state interference with research 
detailed in a 2005 Human Rights Watch report has been resolved, and the need to 
take on other work due to low salaries leaves many academics with little to no 
time to do research. In this instance, commercial success is not correlated 
with social benefit.

Details here:
http://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/2015/04/10/who-is-served-by-for-profit-gold-open-access-publishing-a-case-study-of-hindawi-and-egypt/

best,

--
Dr. Heather Morrison
Assistant Professor
École des sciences de l'information / School of Information Studies
University of Ottawa
Desmarais 111-02
613-562-5800 ext. 7634
Sustaining the Knowledge Commons: Open Access Scholarship
http://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/
http://www.sis.uottawa.ca/faculty/hmorrison.html
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>


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