eJournals Forum Modernes Theater 30/1-2

Forum Modernes Theater
fmth
0930-5874
2196-3517
Narr Verlag Tübingen
10.2357/FMTh-2015-0001
Es handelt sich um einen Open-Access-Artikel, der unter den Bedingungen der Lizenz CC by 4.0 veröffentlicht wurde.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/611
2019
301-2 Balme

Editorial: Open access revisited

611
2019
Christopher Balme
fmth301-20003
Editorial: Open access revisited: Plan S. Christopher Balme (München) I am sometimes asked whether FMT is an open access journal. This seemingly benign and simple question belies one of the most complex and fraught political issues currently being debated in the field of science and research. My answer is: well sort of. FMT is a traditional subscription model academic journal, which, being based in Germany, is also reliant on subsidy. Under this business model, the publisher collects twice: through subscriptions and through publishing subventions, provided until recently by the DFG, which has now, however, largely cancelled its subsidies for academic journals. The open access movement (OA) argues that scientific research funded by public money should not be protected behind expensive subscriptions but should be available free of charge to public scrutiny. Most scholars, libraries and scientific organisations support this idea in principle, although its execution in practice is much more complicated. The publisher of FMT, Narr Verlag in Tübingen, has begun to react to the open access movement by making older articles freely available online. Currently, the two most recent years are subject to an embargo which means they can only be accessed via subscription. This also applies to university libraries which often provide fulltext access to journals, also to FMT, but only if the library holds an online subscription. As editor of the journal I find myself in the strange situation that I have no digital access to the most recent issues of FMT, even through the formidable subscription holdings of the LMU University library system. LMU does of course subscribe to the journal but has no access, it seems, to the most recent issues. This is because, the LMU is still reliant on an old print subscription without online access. This is only one of the many absurdities currently besetting the jungle of academic journals. FMT is by no means exceptional in this regard but is following a common practice amongst academic publishers to instigate an embargo on the most recent issues. Last week I received an enquiry from a colleague involved with the new online journal of EASTAP, the European Association for the Study of Theatre and Performance which had its inaugural conference last November 2018 in Paris. The enquiry was the following: The members of the journal editorial committee are soliciting advice: they would like to know if the journal should become Open Access after one year, or two years. In other words, should it be available to members and paying readers only for one year, or two years? In addition, they would like to know what price it might be reasonable to charge for access to each article. My answer to the question was to highlight the many complex issues and solutions that have accrued around the debates over open access. One is confronted by a bewildering number of terms and labels most of which seem to be based on various precious metals: gold, diamond, platinum. These are the expensive solutions, whereas the cheaper variants are coded by colour such as green. This is all very bewildering when you think that the basic idea behind open access is a simple one: publicly funded research should be made available to the public without cost. Behind all this is a fascinating chapter of scientific history which goes back to the early Forum Modernes Theater, 30/ 1-2 (2015 [2019]), 3 - 4. Gunter Narr Verlag Tübingen DOI 10.2357/ FMTh-2015-0001 1950 s when a Czech-born returned British soldier called Ján Ludvík Hyman Binyamin Hoch, better known as Robert Maxwell (1923 - 1991), recognised a huge potential market in publishing academic journals. These had hitherto been mostly low-key, relatively cheap publications by learned societies or academic institutions. Maxwell founded Pergamon Press and proceeded to buy up or found new scientific journals, all of which had to be purchased through expensive subscriptions by the rapidly expanding academic library system. In 1991 Pergamon was bought up by the publishing giant Elsevier which along with Springer and a few other heavyweights is today at the heart of the Open Access struggle. Elsevier in particular charges staggering amounts for its subscriptions to high profile journals with profit margins around 40 - 50 %. As Maxwell and the publishers following him realised: scholarly journals were effectively a license to print money because much of the labour involved, the actual research, was publicly founded and the scholar-authors didn ’ t need to be paid! The goldrush gradually came to an end in the late 1990 s under the twin pressures of technological innovation, the Internet, and contracting library budgets which meant that serials were no longer automatically subscribed to. Commercial and academic publishers have reacted to open access by welcoming the idea in principle while at the same time finding ways to monetise it. The most common version of open access by established publishers is so-called ‘ gold access ’ . This means that authors pay publishers to make an article immediately available at the time of publication, an article-processing charge or APC. Publishers point to the high costs they incur through the peer review process, editing and copyediting all of which contribute to maintaining high scientific standards. This move has been so successful that funding organisations now permit publication subsidies as part of the application proposal. The costs can range from US $150 to $5000 per article according to Elsevier with a mean value of around $3000 per article. Green open access on the other hand permits free access to articles but usually only after an embargo period. Green also permits authors to self-archive versions of the article, usually a preprint version, which does not include the final pagination. Both gold and green belong to the category of socalled hybrid journals, subscription titles that allow papers to be made freely available in return for the payment of an articleprocessing charge. Open access is an ongoing campaign. Its most recent move is the so-called Plan S backed by 13 European national research agencies and three charitable foundations including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. This plan demands that research outputs from research they fund should be barred from appearing in subscription journals, including hybrid periodicals, after 2020. The British Academy has opposed this radical part of the plan because, it argues, in the humanities and social sciences, nearly all major journals are hybrid. So where does this leave FMT? Like most journals in the humanities it is hybrid and would be affected by Plan S. Signatories and supporters of the plan include the DFG and the ERC as well as most of the national funding agencies readers of this journal might possibly be funded by. The move towards full green open access seems to be inexorable. The challenge for FMT will be to find a way to meet these new requirements and maintain its productive relationship to its host publisher. Please watch this editorial for further developments. Christopher Balme, Munich, February 2019. 4 Christopher Balme