More than 30 University of California faculty have quit editorial positions at Cell and other leading academic journals owned by Elsevier in an escalating showdown with the publishing giant over open access.
The editors include many in their fields, compounding the pressure on Elsevier as it battles a major statewide university system that produces 10聽per cent of the US鈥 academic research papers.
鈥淎ny time faculty members are educated and energised enough to take a stand like this, it鈥檚 a huge plus,鈥 said a leading open access advocate, Heather Joseph, executive director of the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition.
In making their move, the editors talked more about the inconvenience that California faculty now face than they did about any determined commitment to global efforts aimed at making science articles freely available to all users.
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In a three-paragraph to Elsevier, the participating faculty said simply that they were protesting against the lack of a contract between the California system and Elsevier, and their resulting inability to directly access the company鈥檚 library of 2,500 scientific journals.
The 10-campus California system refused to sign a renewal with Elsevier when its contract expired in January, insisting that the publisher take more aggressive steps to offer its content in formats that do not require subscriptions.
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Elsevier allowed 颁补濒颈蹿辞谤苍颈补鈥檚 online access to publications to remain in place for nearly six more months before finally cutting it last month in the absence of any new negotiations.
Up to that point, said James Hurley, professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley, who helped to organise the mass resignations, the issue 鈥渄idn鈥檛 seem that pressing鈥 because the institution鈥檚 contract talks with Elsevier in past years had often produced drama and occasional impasses.
鈥淲e thought this would resolve itself, and everyone went back to their work and didn鈥檛 pay too much attention,鈥 Professor Hurley said. 鈥淚t became more real when the access was actually cut off in July.鈥
颁补濒颈蹿辞谤苍颈补鈥檚 contract offer would require Elsevier to make open access formats the default option for all authors, and would cut 10聽per cent from the $11聽million (拢9聽million) a聽year the system had been paying Elsevier. The company has been聽 to expand its open access offerings, but without including prominent titles such as Cell and 罢丑别听尝补苍肠别迟, and without cutting the $11聽million annual fee.
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Professor Hurley 鈥 who served on the editorial boards of Cell and three other Elsevier journals 鈥 accused Elsevier of failing to recognise that 颁补濒颈蹿辞谤苍颈补鈥檚 $11聽million payment comes on top of the work performed by hundreds of California academics聽who serve on the company鈥檚 editorial boards and the thousands more who write and review its articles.
鈥淚f they don鈥檛 recognise that that鈥檚 part of the value that UC contributes, then we need to publish elsewhere,鈥 he said.
Other signatories include Berkeley鈥檚 Jennifer Doudna, a co-inventor of the CRISPR-Cas9 technology to manipulate genes; Nobel prizewinner Elizabeth Blackburn, of the University of California, San Francisco; and Stephen Smale, vice-dean for research at the medical school of the University of California, Los Angeles.
By other measures, however, Elsevier may have little reason for urgency. The quarterly earnings issued last month by its parent company, RELX, showed that Elsevier鈥檚 operating profit remained at about 36 per cent 鈥 a level many academics see as proof that the company is not treating them fairly 鈥 with reported increases in both contract renewals and new subscription sales.
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An Elsevier spokesman expressed regret for the inconvenience facing California faculty and said he was optimistic that the situation would be resolved.
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