Published February 22, 2022 | Version v2
Preprint Open

Ethical publishing: how do we get there?

  • 1. GLOBE Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  • 2. ISEM, Univ Montpellier, CNRS, IRD, France
  • 3. Sytra - Earth and Life Institute, UCLouvain, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium
  • 4. Research Group of Healthcare and Ethics, Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences, Hasselt University, Belgium
  • 5. School of BioSciences, Faculty of Science, University of Melbourne, Australia
  • 6. Institut Sophia Agrobiotech, Inrae-CNRS-Université Côte d'Azur, France
  • 7. CBGP, Inrae-IRD-CIRAD-Montpellier Supagro-Université de Montpellier, France

Description

The scientific journal publishing model is deeply unethical: today, a few major for-profit conglomerates control more than 50% of all articles in the natural sciences and social sciences, driving subscription and open-access publishing fees above levels that can be sustainably maintained by publicly funded universities, libraries and research institutions worldwide. About a third of the costs paid for publishing papers is profit for these dominant publishers’ shareholders, and about half of them covers costs to maintain the system running, including lobbying, marketing fees and paywalls, which in turn restrict access of scientific outputs from being freely shared to the public and other researchers. Thus, money that the public is told goes into science is actually being funneled away from it, or used to limit its access. Alternatives to this model exist and have increased in popularity in recent years, including diamond open-access journals and community-driven recommendation models that are free of charge for authors and minimize costs for institutions and agencies, while making peer-reviewed scientific results publicly accessible. However, for-profit publishing agents have made change difficult, by co-opting open-access schemes and creating journal-driven incentives that prevent an effective collective transition away from profiteering. Here, we give a brief overview of the current state of the academic publishing system, including its most important systemic problems. We then describe alternative systems. We explain the reasons why the move towards them can be perceived as costly to individual researchers, and demystify common roadblocks to change. Finally, in view of the above, we provide a set of guidelines and recommendations that academics at all levels can implement, in order to enable a more rapid and effective transition towards ethical publishing.

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