This sentence struck me in Jean-Claude's message: "Most of the journals
are published in Finnish."
If impact is the prime objective of open access (and I agree with Stevan
cum suis that it should be), should not the case be made that for
material of global relevance (which may not be the situation for these
Finnish titles mentioned by Jean-Claude) not only open access but
also publication in English whenever possible is one of the essentials in
order to achieve optimal impact? English is after all extremely widely
understood by non-native speakers of the language, and this is
particularly true in scientific circles. And for those not reading
English, surely a translation in their own language from English is
easier to obtain on the whole than, say, from Finnish, Dutch or
Serbo-Croation, to name some random examples.
Jan Velterop
Jean-Claude Guédon <jean.claude.guedon_at_UMONTREAL.CA> wrote:
Pursuing my attempt to get some fix on the proportion of
research
journals directly or indirectly subsidized by governmental
funds - once
again, let me clarify that the indirect subsidy does *not*
include the
costs of subscriptions paid by publicly supported libraries;
nor does it
include the costs of publishing articles in a so-called
"author-pays"
business model à la BiomedCentral orPLoS - here are some
interesting
results from Finland, obtained from the Academy of Finland:
---------------------------------------
I am sorry I can´t put any exact figure on scholarly journals
published
in Finland. The total number can be about 70. Which are
really
scientific or scholarly is not easy to define. Most of the
journals are
published in Finnish.
The Academy of Finland grants subsidies to support the
publishing
activities of scientific societies. We do not have scientific
journals
published by private publishing houses in Finland. Each
society runs its
own "business". Scientific societies have got these grants
for decades.
So I would say that the process is more traditionalist than
selective.
Many of the journals subsidized by Academy get indirect
subsidy, too.
Like you described in your text. Those few journals which are
not
subsidized by Academy get some other indirect or direct
subsidy.
Hope my generalised and nonspecific answer gives you some
idea of the
scientific publishing in Finland.
-----------------------------------------------
My summary of this is that, in Finland, the Acadmey provides
block
grants to the scientific societies. These in turn use these
block grants
to publish journals that range from the scholarly level (peer
reviewed)
to non-scholarly levels (popularization?, professional?,
educational?).
One thing is clear, however: *all* scholarly journals (with
peer review)
in Finland are publicly supported, both directly and
indirectly.
The unresolved issue is that, of the 70 journals, the Academy
does not
appear to know the number of the truly scholarly or
scientific journals,
the apparent reason being the way in which this financing is
delegated.
This situation of delegation cum scientific association
autonomy is
relatively common IMHO. Scientific societies always strive
for maximum
freedom of action even while requesting maximum support from
governmental sources. In a good number of countries - and
Finland
appears to be one of them - they seem to achieve a fair
degree of
success. From my perspective, this situation alas creates
another layer
of opacity.
In conclusion, all scholarly journals published in Finland
are publicly
supported. So Stevan's request for a proportion figure finds
an easy
answer: 100%. We simply do not know how many of these
journals there
are.
If any reader on the list, preferably from Finland, can give
us an
estimate of this number of scientific or scholarly journals,
we will
have a fairly complete picture of the situation in Finland.
And I continue to be interested in any data from any country
on this
question of public support (direct and indirect) to the
publishing of
scientific and scholarly journals.
Best,
Jean-Claude Guédon
--
Dr. Jean-Claude Guédon
Dept. of Comparative Literature
University of Montreal
PO Box 6128, Downtown Branch
Montreal, QC H3C 3J7
Canada
Received on Wed Sep 28 2005 - 12:31:34 BST
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