Locked in the Ivory Tower: Why JSTOR Imprisons Academic Research

Laura McKenna | Jan 20, 2012

Universities have to pay thousands of dollars every year to read their own 
research online. Blame the broken economics of academic publishing.

http://m.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/01/locked-in-the-ivory-tower-why-jstor-imprisons-academic-research/251649/

This morning, I searched for an article about autism on JSTOR, the online 
database of academic journals. I have a child on the autistic spectrum, and I 
like to be aware of the latest research on the topic. I could not access any of 
the first 200 articles that contained the word "autism." That's because, for 
the most part, only individuals with a college ID card can read academic 
journal articles.  Everyone else, including journalists, non-affiliated 
scholars, think tanks and curious individuals, must pay a substantial fee per 
article, if the articles are available at all.

I later found one article that was available for $38. I'm not sure why one 
twelve page article costs $38. It takes me about eight minutes to scan a twelve 
page article. The researcher receives no royalties. Why does it cost so much to 
read one article? 

The answer lies in the antiquated system of academic publishing.

FROM IVORY TOWER TO GATED DATABASE

When an academic conducts research on, say, autism, the research often takes 
several years. That research is funded by national grants and subsidized 
through the university. The professor is given  travel money and "release time" 
to conduct the research. Then the academic submits the paper to an academic 
journal. 

Academic journals are housed at universities and are subsidized by the 
university, because it brings the university prestige. Academic journals are 
edited by faculty members. The faculty are given course release time to edit 
the journal and a small stipend. The university provides offices and work-study 
students to help with the secretarial work. 

The editor reviews the manuscripts. If the paper isn't total rubbish, then it 
is sent to up to a handful of other faculty at other universities, who are 
experts on this topic. The reviewers provide content and writing commentary on 
the research. Their universities support their activities, because it increases 
the prestige of their institutions. 

After the reviewers provide commentary, the journal editor forwards this 
feedback to the professor, who makes corrections. It is sent back to the 
journal editor who packages it up with other papers, writes an introduction, 
and then sends it to a for-profit publisher. 

The publisher is key, because he needs money to print and distribute the 
journal for its tiny community of readers. To make that money, the publisher 
sells the rights to an academic search engine company, like JSTOR. For the 
publisher, this venture is highly profitable because, unlike traditional 
publishing, the publisher does not have to pay the writer or editor. It only 
has to cover the costs of typesetting, printing, and distribution.

Having bought the rights to the academic research, JSTOR digitizes the material 
and sells the content back to the university libraries. To recoup their costs 
of leasing the information from the publishers, the academic search engines use 
a subscription model to restrict the content to those who can pay the hefty 
price tag. A substantial part of the university library budget is devoted 
towards subscriptions to those databases. The UC San Diego Libraries report 
that 65% of their total budget goes towards getting access to JSTOR and other 
databases. To get access to the Arts and Sciences collection at JSTOR -- only 
one of the many databases and collections of information  -- university 
libraries must pay a one time charge of $45,000 and then $8,500 every year 
after that.

Step back and think about this picture. Universities that created this academic 
content for free must pay to read it. Step back even further. The public -- 
which has indirectly funded this research with federal and state taxes that 
support our higher education system -- has virtually no access to this 
material, since neighborhood libraries cannot afford to pay those subscription 
costs. Newspapers and think tanks, which could help extend research into the 
public sphere, are denied free access to the material. Faculty members are 
rightly bitter that their years of work reaches an audience of a handful, while 
every year, 150 million attempts to read JSTOR content are denied every year.

FREE THE RESEARCH!

How could we make this academic research more accessible to the public? The 
challenge is finding a way to get research on the web by bypassing the 
publisher/JSTOR nexus. If academic journals skipped that needless step of 
providing a print version of their journals, they could stop this cycle. They 
could simply upload the papers to a website and take the publishers out of the 
process. 

In the age of Google Scholar, there is no need for independent academic search 
engines. Faculty could receive broader readership for their research. An online 
environment would provide more collaboration and faster publication times. 
University libraries would save vast sums of money. Curious individuals who 
want to know more about autism research would be able to have direct access to 
information.

Stubborn tradition keeps this cycle in motion. 


---
Just because i'm near the punchbowl doesn't mean I'm also drinking from it.

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