Abstract

Background: Open access (OA) implies free and unrestricted access to and re-use of research articles. Recently, OA publishing has seen a new wave of interest, debate, and practices surrounding that mode of publishing. Objectives: To provide an overview of publication practices and to compare them among six countries across the world to stimulate further debate and to raise awareness about OA to facilitate decision-making on further development of OA practices in earth sciences. Methods: The number of OA articles, their distribution among the six countries, and top ten journals publishing OA articles were identified using two databases, namely Scopus and the Web of Science, based mainly on the data for 2018. Results: In 2018, only 24%–31% of the total number of articles indexed by either of the databases were OA articles. Six of the top ten earth sciences journals that publish OA articles were fully OA journals and four were hybrid journals. Fully OA journals were mostly published by emerging publishers and their article processing charges ranged from $1000 to $2200. Conclusions: The rise in OA publishing has potential implications for researchers and tends to shift article-processing charges from organizations to individuals. Until the earth sciences community decides to move away from journal-based criteria to evaluate researchers, it is likely that such high costs will continue to maintain financial inequities within this research community, especially to the disadvantage of researchers from the least developed countries. However, earth scientists, by opting for legal self- archiving of their publications, could help to promote equitable and sustainable access to, and wider dissemination of, their work.

Highlights

  • Journals are the primary vehicle for communicating research to other researchers and have traditionally been run by various societies and associations.[1]

  • Until the earth sciences community decides to move away from journal-based criteria to evaluate researchers, it is likely that such high costs will continue to maintain financial inequities within this research community, especially to the disadvantage of researchers from the least developed countries

  • In choosing a journal for submitting their manuscripts, authors consider a number of factors: coverage by indexing services, readership, type of journal, the journal’s Impact Factor (IF), language, type of article, average time taken for peer review, reputation of the journal, and article-processing charges (APCs) or any other charges

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Summary

Introduction

Journals are the primary vehicle for communicating research to other researchers and have traditionally been run by various societies and associations.[1]. A decline in print versions, the high costs of journal subscriptions, and the increasing costs of publication are all spurring scientists to look for alternatives to the traditional scientific publishing.[3,4] In addition, according to STM (formerly the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers),[5] two-thirds of the scholarly literature produced in 2016 remains mostly inaccessible to the public because the work is hidden behind prohibitively expensive subscription paywalls This constraint is driving the ever-increasing move to open access (OA), which, while generally slow, marks a significant shift in the financial models used by major publishers within a scientific, technical, and medical information publishing market that generated $25.7 billion in 2017. OA publishing has seen a new wave of interest, debate, and practices surrounding that mode of publishing

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