Comments on: Applying open source methodology and economics to academia http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/27/applying-open-source-methodology-and-economics-to-academia/ The Humanities and Technology Camp Tue, 08 Mar 2011 21:52:08 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 By: Zach Whalen http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/27/applying-open-source-methodology-and-economics-to-academia/#comment-86 Wed, 19 May 2010 15:28:01 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=144#comment-86 This parallel between open source and open publishing — I’m interested to explore it further, especially since I don’t find those familiar pushbacks all that convincing. At least for humanities publishing that I’ve been involved with, it’s not like anyone has ever paid me to review an article. In most cases, it’s a professional courtesy for a journal/book I believe in, and I get “paid” by putting listing on my annual activity report that I did some article reviews. I also get the intellectual satisfaction of contributing to a specific shape for one slice of a discipline.

I know in some disciplines, journals routinely pass along the the costs of publishing to the authors themselves, so where does that fit into the analogy?

Also, it seems worth bringing up Nick Montfort (and others) who have sworn off publishing in or supporting “closed-access” journals, on the grounds that these publish in bad faith. My response at the time was the economics of publishing (i.e. CV lines) make that a harder choice for grad students and junior faculty, but the ethical angle is pretty interesting. It’s been argued (I forget by whom) that employees of the state have an obligation to make the work they produce publicly available to the tax payers who support us.

I don’t know about that, but I can certainly attest to the frustration of being at a smaller institution that can’t afford some of the (really expensive) journal subscriptions I’d like and that I got used to having at a bigger institution.

Anyway, I think this is really interesting stuff, and I think the parallel implications for an economic model go broader than the efficacy or impetus for peer review.

]]>
By: Jeremy Boggs http://chnm2010.thatcamp.org/04/27/applying-open-source-methodology-and-economics-to-academia/#comment-85 Wed, 12 May 2010 15:10:40 +0000 http://thatcamp.org/?p=144#comment-85 Definitely would like to talk about this, too! In one chapter of Perspectives on Free and Open Source Software (2007), someone (and I can’t remember who right now) compares open source development to science, and makes a good point with science that while our models for publishing and sharing research have changed dramatically, our models for distributing credit and reputation have not.

]]>