India Can Have Its Own Open Access Digital Publishing Platform

Photo: mitifotos/Unsplash

Knowledge sharing is the key to research success, and scientific journals play a crucial role here. The concept of scientific publishing took root around four centuries ago, through noble intentions and the sponsorships of various learned societies.

But from around the 1950s, Robert Maxwell and others have turned academic publishing more broadly into a principally money-spinning enterprise. Today, the academic publishing industry operates in a concentrated market replete with big players, and is predominantly revenue-driven.

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Former Harvard University librarian Robert Darnton described their principal transgression in a recent article for The Guardian: “We faculty do the research, write the papers, referee papers by other researchers, serve on editorial boards, all of it for free… and then we buy back the results of our labour at outrageous prices” from the journals.

The journals’ exorbitant prices for readers to access the papers they published led to the Budapest Open Access Initiative, among other similar resolutions, which popularised open-access papers.

In the ‘conventional’ publishing model, a paper is published in the following process: