[Open-access] Data expedition idea - scholarly publishing income
Jenny Molloy
jenny.molloy at okfn.org
Thu Nov 21 15:46:14 UTC 2013
Hi All
I wondered about a potential collaboration between School of Data and the
Open Science/Open Access working groups on a Data
Expedition<http://schoolofdata.org/category/data-expeditions/>around
scholarly publishers and their income.
The bottom line is some make a lot of profit, much of it from public
funding of higher education and research and possibly pay very little tax,
but there's not been much exploration of this beyond some figures on
profits which appear in blogs and a few articles and mostly in text and
tables.
It would be great to try and draw a more comprehensive dataset together,
visualise it and tell some stories.
Some figures:
THE Summary: http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/421672.article
Full article: https://lra.le.ac.uk/handle/2381/9689
>From Mike Taylor
http://svpow.com/2012/01/13/the-obscene-profits-of-commercial-scholarly-publishers/
:
"Here they are again: profits as a percentage of revenue for commercial STM
publishers in 2010 or early 2011:
- Elsevier: £724m on revenue of £2b — 36%
- Springer‘s Science+Business Media: £294m on revenue of £866m — 33.9%
- John Wiley & Sons: $106m on revenue of $253m — 42%
- Academic division of Informa plc: £47m on revenue of £145m — 32.4%"
Similar figures are also in Heather Morrison's thesis:
http://pages.cmns.sfu.ca/heather-morrison/chapter-two-scholarly-communication-in-crisis/
A few questions:
1. Do you think this is a suitable topic for exploration?
2. What are the thoughts of those who have run data expeditions or
spending stories type projects before?
3. Does anyone feel strongly about this and would like to coordinate the
project?
4. Would anyone like to help out? (could you host a workshop, are you
organising an event or conference where this could run as a session, are
you a data wrangler, visualisation expert, journalist, coder, accountant,
researcher or anybody just interested in digging in?)
Reply to the list and sign up on the pad if so!
http://pad.okfn.org/p/scholarly-publishers-data-expedition
Thanks very much :)
Jenny
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