Hiya All,

This is an issue I have thought a lot about. My work takes me to various 
countries, some of which might be classified as despotic. I have worked with 
the governments of those countries, always from the perspective of advancing 
open access and free learning. The question I have asked myself is whether it 
is appropriate to work with them.

I have decided that it is, and for a very simple reason: any principled 
selection process would leave me with very few countries to work with, if any.

It is easy to point to a particular country and suggest that we should not work 
with that country. But if we apply the same principle that led us to that 
decision the we are left with a significant practical problem. And if we extend 
that principle to agents of the country, including companies that support that 
country, or customers of that country, or suppliers to that country, as we most 
surely should, then we are left with no countries in which to work.

And at a certain point, when a recommendation to boycott a given country is 
made, I find that I have to ask, why this country? What made the person select 
this country to address, as opposed to one of the many others engaged in the 
same practice?

I will most certainly concur with Heather Morrison that a problem exists. There 
are countries in the world that murder their own citizens, either 
extra-legally, or by some sort of state sanctioned capital punishment. There 
are many countries that interfere with the publication of academic materials on 
political grounds. There is definitely a problem, one of many problems plaguing 
our world today.

How to address this? It is easy to identify what we oppose and to work against 
it. But my experience is that, in the long term, if is much more effective to 
work *for* something. It is also a lot harder, which is maybe why we don't see 
so much of it.

We need, globally, to build the structures and institutions that will address 
issues such as this. Support for entities such as the United Nations and the 
World Court will go a long way toward addressing oppressive regimes. It is 
essential to build international trade regulations that prioritize justice, 
human rights, and environment as much as they do the needs of global capital.

It is tempting to short-cut this process, to have (say) DOAJ stand on its own 
against countries that oppress their citizens. But this is not justice, nor can 
it be seen as any pretense of justice. Only by building the institutions that 
serve all people, on a global scale, will we be able to address the injustices 
that we, as individuals, seek to redress. Any other approach would be parochial 
and sectarian.

Meanwhile, as an individual, I stay firm and unwavering in my own commitment to 
individual autonomy, celebration of diversity, an open society, and collective 
governance. Change happens not by changing governments, but by changing people, 
and the only way to change people is to be an example of the change you want to 
see in them.

-- Stephen




From: goal-boun...@eprints.org [mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org] On Behalf Of 
Heather Morrison
Sent: August 14, 2019 5:22 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci) <goal@eprints.org>
Subject: [GOAL] DOAJ: handmaiden to despots? or, OA, let's talk

As any movement grows and flourishes, decisions made will turn out to have 
unforeseen consequences. Achieving the goals of the movement requires critical 
reflection and occasional changes in policy and procedure.The purpose of this 
post is to point out that the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) appears 
to be inadvertently acting as a handmaiden to at least one despotic government, 
facilitating dissemination of works subject to censorship and rejecting open 
access journals that would be suitable venues for critics of the despotic 
government. There is no blame and no immediately obvious remedy, but solving a 
problem begins with acknowledging that a problem exists and inviting discussion 
of how to avoid and solve the problem. OA friends, please consider this such an 
invitation.

Sustaining the knowledge commons full post:
https://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/2019/08/14/doaj-handmaiden-to-despots-or-oa-we-need-to-talk/



best,



Dr. Heather Morrison

Associate Professor, School of Information Studies, University of Ottawa

Professeur Agrégé, École des Sciences de l'Information, Université d'Ottawa

Principal Investigator, Sustaining the Knowledge Commons, a SSHRC Insight 
Project

sustainingknowledgecommons.org

heather.morri...@uottawa.ca<mailto:heather.morri...@uottawa.ca>

https://uniweb.uottawa.ca/?lang=en#/members/706
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