Abstract

There are major challenges that need to be addressed in the world of scholarly communication, especially in the field of environmental studies and in the context of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. Recently, Sonne et al. (2020) published an article in Science of the Total Environment discussing some of these challenges. However, we feel that many of the arguments misrepresent critical elements of Open Access (OA), Plan S, and broader issues in scholarly publishing. In our response, we focus on addressing key elements of their discussion on (i) OA and Plan S, as well as (ii) Open Access Predatory Journals (OAPJ). The authors describe OA and Plan S as restricting author choice, especially through the payment of article-processing charges. The reality is that ‘green OA’ self-archiving options alleviate virtually all of the risks they mention, and are even the preferred ‘routes’ to OA as stated by both institutional and national policies in Denmark. In alignment with this, Plan S is also taking a progressive stance on reforming research evaluation. The assumptions these authors make about OA in the “global south” also largely fail to acknowledge some of the progressive work being done in regions like Indonesia and Latin America. Finally, Sonne et al. (2020) highlight the threat that OAPJs face to our scholarly knowledge production system. While we agree generally that OAPJs are problematic, the authors simultaneously fail to mention many of the excellent initiatives helping to combat this threat (e.g., the Directory of Open Access Journals). We call for researchers to more effectively equip themselves with sufficient knowledge of relevant systems before making public statements about them, in order to prevent misinformation from polluting the debate about the future of scholarly communication.

Highlights

  • We agree with Sonne et al (2020) that there are major challenges that need to be addressed in the world of scholarly communication, especially in the field of environmental studies

  • The authors fall into the easy trap of conflating Plan S and Open Access (OA) with an Article Processing Charge (APC)-only model, implying that they will only be able to publish in low-ranked journals

  • Even UNESCO have recognised the great value in these initiatives, especially in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals, coalescing in the launch of the Global Alliance of Open Access Scholarly Communication Platforms (GLOALL)

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Summary

Introduction

We agree with Sonne et al (2020) that there are major challenges that need to be addressed in the world of scholarly communication, especially in the field of environmental studies. The authors fall into the easy trap of conflating Plan S and OA with an APC-only model, implying that they will only be able to publish in low-ranked journals.

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