Philosophers' perceptions of pay to publish and open access in Spain: Books versus journals, more than a financial dilemma
Pay to publish and open access have been studied extensively, but less so in disciplines such as philosophy and ethics. This study examines the habits and perceptions of researchers from these two fields in Spain. The study draws on data from a survey (completed by 201 out of 541 researchers), a pub...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Learned publishing 2022-04, Vol.35 (2), p.118-129 |
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description | Pay to publish and open access have been studied extensively, but less so in disciplines such as philosophy and ethics. This study examines the habits and perceptions of researchers from these two fields in Spain. The study draws on data from a survey (completed by 201 out of 541 researchers), a public debate with 26 researchers, and 14 in‐depth interviews. Our results offer some interesting insights into the criteria researchers apply when selecting publishers and journals, notably the value they place on the absence of publication fees. However, habits differ for publishing an article or a book, since payment to publish books is more widespread. The study finds contrasting views on the market for publishing books and journals: some respondents perceived what they consider to be the commercialisation of publishing in academic journals, while others provide arguments to support the Spanish book industry. Sceptical views were also voiced on pay to publish as a funding model. Finally, the study finds broad agreement among the researchers surveyed that publicly funded research should be free to read. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1002/leap.1426 |
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source | Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete |
subjects | article processing charges book processing charges ethics Fees & charges humanities open access Open access publishing peer review philosophy publication funding publishing fees scholarly communication Scholarly publishing Spain |
title | Philosophers' perceptions of pay to publish and open access in Spain: Books versus journals, more than a financial dilemma |
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