Open Publishing & “Predatory Publishers”

Thursday, March 29th, 2012 | Charlotte | No Comments

At the Open Publishing Seminar back in February I touched on the issue of predatory publishers.  One of the lists I’m on has recently had a thread on PPs some content of which may be of interest to those wanting to identify PPs or assess OA publishers.  The full posts are here: http://liblicense.crl.edu

The Chronicle of Higher Education has a long piece on ‘predatory OA journals’, with a focus on the work of Jeffrey Beall, a librarian at the University of Colorado at Denver, who tracks open-access publishers that operate on an author-pays model.

http://chronicle.com/article/Predatory-Online-Journals/131047/?key=HD10d1VhNHdJbCsyZTgRMj4EOyFoZk0hYn9JPS8pbl9cEQ%3D%3D

His blog  http://metadata.posterous.com/?tag=predatoryopenaccessjournals and web site http://scholarlyoa.com/ include summaries about apparently unethical publishers.

This does need to be treated with some caution as Mr Beall’s lists are drawn up by him based on patterns of behaviour, although there are criteria that Mr Beall uses to raise suspicions about particular publishers.  Ina Smith from Stellenbosch University, South Africa reported to the list that they have started to compile some criteria against which they measure the validity of an OA journal.  I thought this worth sharing:

The Stellenbosch criteria are:

1. Mandatory

  • The journal must have a proper web page and URL with the following info e.g. Contact details, Editorial Team, Editorial Board, Advisory Board, Scope and Focus, Peer Review Process (must be an exhaustive peer review process), Publication Frequency, Open Access Policy, Author Guidelines, About the Publisher, Previously published issues (Archive) , Copyright policy (under the Creative Commons Licensing policies
  • International editorial board
  • Valid online ISSN registered with the ISSN International Centre (France)
  • Members of CrossRef with doi’s assigned to individual articles
  • Journal must have established a history of responsible reporting (not always possible with “new” OA journals)
  • The journal must contain good quality articles detailing well performed research

 

2. Recommended

  • Listed on DOAJ (not all OA journals are listed on DOAJ immediately, and there might be a slight time delay)
  • (Howard’s note: some publishers and their journals considered predatory by Mr Beall (e.g. Internet Scientific Publications) are listed on DOAJ)
  • Publisher must be registered with OASPA
  • OA Policy of publisher must be available via SHERPA/RoMEO
  • Listed on Wikipedia as an academic journal
  • Digital preservation policy in place
  • Journal title must be listed with one of the following:

– International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)

– Science Citation Index

– Social Sciences Citation Index

– Arts and Humanities Citation Index

  • Journal impact factor assigned to the journal – Journal Citation Reports – ISI (for impact factors)
  • Journal ranking is recommended – SCImago Journal Ranking (Scopus)

 

If researchers are considering publishing in an unfamiliar OA journal that follows the author pays model the Liaison Librarians would be happy to assist with an assessment of the Journal.

Cory Doctorow: “Internet and technologies, a matter of copyright?”

Saturday, March 10th, 2012 | Richard White | No Comments

A typically thoughtful piece by the Canadian-British fiction author, blogger, journalist and activist Cory Doctorow: “it’s time we stopped thinking about what makes good copyright policy and just think about what makes good policy.” In other words, in the connected world can’t create policy that only deals with certain aspects of it all.

Check it out on Creative Arte: Cory Doctorow: “Internet and technologies, a matter of copyright?”.

The 7th International Conference on Open Repositories

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012 | GILLIAN ELLIOT | No Comments

Follow the link below to submit a Conference paper, User Group Presentation, Pecha Kucha, Poster, Demonstration or Workshop proposal. Please note that the system accepts submissions in the following file formats – pdf, doc, docx, rtf, odt and txt.

https://www.conftool.net/or2012/

The deadline for submissions is 5th March 8th March (23:59 GMT) for papers, workshops or user group sessions; and 31st March 2012 (23:59 GMT) for posters, Pecha Kucha and demos.

For more information on the conference themes and different submission headings please see the earlier Call for Proposals.

EDGEX2012 New Delhi March 12-14 (Webcast)

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012 | MARK MCGUIRE | No Comments

Check out the #EDGEX2012 Conference. The speakers include Jay Cross, George Siemens, Stephen Downes, Clark Quinn, Dave Cormier, Alec Couros, Grainne Conole, Alicia Sanchez, Martin Weller, Les Foltos, and Jon Dron. This list is a who’s who in the world of educational transformation. Have a look at the EDGEX2012 Brochure, the schedule, and register for the Webcasts.

Lego CC by R.B. Boyer - CC BY-SA

Copyright Community of Practice – first 2012 meeting

Sunday, March 4th, 2012 | Richard White | No Comments

Today being the first meeting of the CCOP for 2012, I went back to the original objectives we devised for the group back in 2008. This is what we said we’d do and most of them still hold true:

  • Meet and discuss copyright issues
  • Co-ordinate different areas
  • Clarify areas of compliance
  • Improve education/access to information/training
  • Promote best practice
  • Advise the Registrar

As is the way of communities of practice, the group has evolved over time, and the increasing focus on things open access has led to the Open Minds seminar series and this blog.

But as with any face-to-face group, the conversation is extremely wide-ranging – and lively – which is hardly surprising given the diverse membership (from musicians to philosophers to librarians).

If you’re on the Dunedin campus, come along to the meeting today at 1pm in the Reception Room (1st floor Clocktower). The other dates for the year are: 7 May, 2 July, 3 September, 5 November, all at 1pm in the Reception Room. (If you’re on another campus and interested let me know and we’ll investigate our options for ways for you to participate).