dc.contributor.author | Fuchs, Christian | |
dc.contributor.author | Sandoval, Marisol | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2021-12-16T17:35:00Z | |
dc.date.available | 2021-12-16T17:35:00Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2013-09-09 | |
dc.identifier.citation | Fuchs, Christian & Sandoval, Marisol. (2013). The Diamond Model of Open Access Publishing: Why Policy Makers, Scholars, Universities, Libraries, Labour Unions and the Publishing World Need to Take Non-Commercial, Non-Profit Open Access Serious. TripleC. 11. 428-443. 10.31269/vol11iss2pp428-443. | es_MX |
dc.identifier.issn | 1726-670X | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/502 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://angola.redalyc.org//handle/123456789/27 | |
dc.description | Open access (OA) publishing is a big contemporary topic that shapes current academic poli cy discussions. Academics, universities, corporate publishing houses, non-profit publishers and journals, editors, editorial boards, labour unions representing publishing workers, funding agencies, as well as policy makers are all important actors in this debate. They hold diverse opinions on OA. | es_MX |
dc.description.abstract | "This reflection introduces a new term to the debate on open access publishing: diamond open access (DOA) publishing. The debate on open access is a debate about the future of academia. We discuss the problems of for-profit academic publishing, such as monopoly prices and access inequalities and point at the limits of contemporary perspectives on open access as they are frequently advanced by the publishing industry, policy makers and labour unions.
The article introduces a public service and commons perspective that stresses the importance of fostering and publicly supporting what we term the model of diamond open access. It is a non-profit academic publishing model that makes academic knowledge a common good, reclaims the common character of the academic system and entails the possibility for fostering job security by creating public service publishing jobs. Existing concepts such as “gold open access” have serious conceptual limits that can be overcome by introducing the new term of diamond open access. The debate on open access lacks visions and requires social innovations. " | es_MX |
dc.language.iso | en | es_MX |
dc.publisher | TripleC | es_MX |
dc.subject | open access publishing | es_MX |
dc.subject | diamond model of open access | es_MX |
dc.subject | gold model of open access | es_MX |
dc.subject | green model of open access | es_MX |
dc.subject | academic knowledge | es_MX |
dc.subject | university | es_MX |
dc.subject | commons | es_MX |
dc.title | The Diamond Model of Open Access Publishing: Why Policy Makers, Scholars, Universities, Libraries, Labour Unions and the Publishing World Need to Take Non-Commercial, Non-Profit Open Access Serious. | es_MX |
dc.type | Article | es_MX |