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Electronic Publication
Publication of research in academic journals serves three main purposes:
dissemination, archiving, and certification.
A fair question to ask is: “How do electronic journals compare to print
journals on these dimensions?”
Dissemination
Electronic publication clearly has the
advantage in dissemination. Access to electronically published research does not
depend on the particular contents of one’s university library (contents that
grows increasingly limited due to the rapid rise in serial subscription prices).
Even if the local library happens to hold a subscription to a particular
paper journal, one still has to take the time and effort to go to the library,
find the volume on the shelf, and possibly copy and eventually file the article
in which one is interested. It is
much easier and less time consuming to obtain an article over the Internet from
one’s office. The pure
convenience of the Internet might be reason enough to prefer electronic
publication. This convenience, however, produces several more substantial
benefits. Most important is that the lower transaction cost of accessing
information over the web encourages us to read more widely. As a result, papers
published electronically are likely to have a larger audience and thus, more
impact, all else equal. It is also much easier to conduct electronic searches of
articles stored on the Internet than to thumb through an index or back issues of
a paper journal. This access is further enhanced by email notification services
that are easily implemented on the Internet. In short, electronic publication
makes research available more widely, more easily, more cheaply, and in a more
searchable format than would ever be possible with paper.
Not surprisingly, the trend in all
academic fields is to move research to the Internet.
Even commercial publishers recognize the inevitability of this and
increasingly are posting published articles electronically.
The dilemma commercial publishers currently face is how to maintain the
revenue streams that they are accustomed to from print journals in the new
electronic environment. In general,
their approach has been to charge libraries extra fees for electronic access to
the journals to which they already subscribe. This puts additional strain on
library budgets, results in cancellation of other serials, and most importantly,
continues to deny access to new research to scholars not fortunate enough to be
placed at institutions with large and wealthy libraries.
The basic problem is that paper
publication is much more expensive than electronic publication.
Even scholarly societies must make sufficient revenues to cover the costs
of producing printed journals. This
puts the interests of academic writers and publishers of paper journals
unavoidably in conflict. The
business model of all traditional publishers is built fundamentally on limiting
access to the contents of their journals to those who have paid for
subscriptions. In contrast, academic authors benefit from the widest
possible distribution of their research. Authors
of journal articles usually give up all financial interests they have in their
manuscript as a condition of publication. The
only rewards they receive come indirectly from having their research widely
read. Fortunately, things
have developed a little differently on the Internet. Here, dominant model is to make content available free of
charge to anyone who might be interested. The
relative cheapness of electronic publication is probably the leading factor that
makes this possible. It goes
without saying that this model is much more in line with the interests of both
academic authors and scientific advancement in general and is, of course, one we
have adopted at the Economics Bulletin.
Archiving
In theory, the Internet should be far
superior to paper as a means of archiving research. In practice, however, there
are some legitimate concerns about electronic archiving. One the one hand, being
able to access back issues remotely from one’s office (or wherever one happens
to be) and being able to search back issues to quickly find relevant literature
is much better than having to identify an interesting article from a list of
references or an index and then figure out where the journal is kept in the
stacks. Even then, the bound
journal may be checked out, missing, or may not even be in the library at all if
the subscription does not go back far enough.
Interlibrary loans are available, but these are time consuming and costly
to the library. In many cases, the scholar may simply decide it is not worth the
effort. Access problems aside, it
costs libraries a great deal to bind, catalogue and store back issues of
journals. Even worse, every library that has a subscription to a journal must
replicate this costly effort. This
redundant archiving is hugely wasteful of resources that might better be spent
on acquiring books or used for other academic purposes. On the other hand, the
Internet is new and extremely fluid. Scholars
may be concerned that content may disappear or not always be available in the
place they expect it to be. We take
these concerns very seriously at the Economics Bulletin and have taken two steps
to address them. First, we have
secured a guarantee from the Library of the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign that they will continue to make the archived contents publicly
available over the Internet should the Economics Bulletin ever cease
publication. This obligation is being undertaken by the third largest university
library in North America because libraries understand that information is moving
to the internet and that they must make this content available on a permanent
basis just as they do paper content. Second,
we have organized our database structure so that published articles will
continue to be available at the same URL forever.
Our hope is that these steps will go a long way to reassuring both
authors and readers that our content is as stable and permanent as that of any
paper publication.
Certification
Clearly, one of the key reasons that
both writers and readers of research care about publication is that the peer
review process serves the essential function of certifying the correctness and
importance of a piece of work. Publishing an article in a highly regarded
journal helps to establish the reputation of a scholar and ensures wide exposure
for his or her research contributions. Readers, in turn, depend on journals to
filter research to help them decide which articles they should invest their time
in reading. In the abstract, commercial publishers have no comparative advantage
whatsoever in providing this certification.
After all, it is scholars who provide the refereeing and editorial
services on which certification depends, not publishing houses.
Given this, it is unclear why we should remain in an equilibrium in which
members of the academy write, referee and edit the contents of research journals
on a voluntary basis or for nominal compensation, and then have their
universities buy back the results of their donated efforts from commercial
publishers at increasingly high prices. If
anything, scholars should be more willing to donate their time to certification
process for noncommercial publishers than for commercial ones, and so paper
journals may even be at a slight disadvantage in this dimension. Nevertheless, there remains a perception that paper journals
are more substantial than electronic journals.
As long as this persists, it will to a large extent be a self-confirming
belief. To a first approximation, a
journal in any format is good largely because we, as a community, agree that it
is good. We all want our articles
published in the best possible journal, and at the present time, these are paper
journals produced by commercial publishers and scholarly societies.
On the one hand, if we were to simultaneously coordinate on a new journal
as a high quality outlet, good papers would be submitted, refereeing standards
would have to rise, and readership and reputation would quickly follow. On the
other hand, no individual scholar would benefit from unilaterally submitting his
best work to a journal before its reputation is established. This gives the
status quo certain stability regardless of the fundamentals.
The power of incumbency makes it
extremely hard for any new journal, especially an electronic one, to develop the
status that would allow its endorsement to carry the reputational weight
required to certify that an article is important.
This is just the way of the intellectual marketplace.
To challenge a well established journal like Econometrica or AER would be
a difficult task indeed. Letters
journals, however, are a different case. More
than any other type of research outlet, these are ideal candidates for
electronic publication. Letters
journals focus on notes, comments, preliminary results and research
announcements. For such timely
work, speed is of the essence and the prestige of the journal is less important
than rapid and widespread distribution of the work.
Hopefully, with time, the reputation of the Economics Bulletin will grow,
and publication in EB will immediately be recognized as a signal of quality
work. In the short run, however,
our review process will serve to certify both the opinion of our referees that a
piece of research is correct, and the opinion of our internationally recognized
editorial board that the ideas contained in our published manuscripts are worthy
of the attention of the profession.
Interesting links relating to electronic publication
The Association of Research Libraries published an interesting piece
on electronic journals in economics in their ARL
Bimonthly Report.
For an interesting collection of papers
on “papyrocentric” attitudes in the academy and electronic publication in
general see the homepage of Stevan
Harnad.
Hal
Varian also has a very extensive and useful page of links relating to
electronic publishing and the information economy in general.
Also see “The Future of Scholarly
Communication: a proposal for change”, by Charles
Phelps and “Legitimizing Electronic Scholarly Publications: A Discursive
Proposal” by Rod
Heimpel.
William
L. Goffe has written an interesting piece from the perspective of the AEA
entitled “The Internet and the American
Economic Association”.
Ted
Bergstrom is very upset about the cost of economics journals and has some
interesting data and a radical proposal. Even
more extensive documentation of the consequences of increasing serial costs may
be found on the Caltech
website.
Librarians are also concerned about this
issue. See for example:
“Reforming Scholarly Publishing in the Sciences: A Librarian Perspective” by
Joseph J. Branin and Mary
Case
These concerns have led to a number of tangible results. Most notably, see the
website of SPARC, a worldwide alliance
of research institutions, libraries and organizations that encourages
competition in the scholarly communications market. SPARC introduces new
solutions to scientific journal publishing, facilitates the use of technology to
expand access, and partners with publishers that bring top-quality, low-cost
research to a greater audience. SPARC’s stated mission is to return science to
scientists. Also have a look at the website of ICAAP,
the International Consortium for the Advancement of Academic Publication, which
hosts a number of electronic publications in a wide variety of fields.
Two other sites of particular interest are Optics
Express, and the Berkeley Electronic Press.
Optics Express is the main letters journal for the Optical Society of
America and is a fully electronic publication set up very much along the lines
of the Economics Bulletin. The B.E. Press is a private company that is beginning to
publish a pair of “quality rated” journals in economic theory and
macroeconomics. Both of these new
journals have outstanding editorial boards and we wish them every success in
spreading electronic publication to Economics.
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