The publishing of academic
work is a tightly controlled process, with critical review taking months
and sometimes years of work that needs to stand the test of "experts"
believing in your work for it to reach print. This is to ensure quality to avoid that bad, or even
misleading work, do not get the quality stamp "scientific"
and "peer reviewed". The idea is good, but is it fair
under current day standards and is it even abused?
Historically
Testing your
experiments against the criticism of your equals is an old concept
that dates back before the time of natural scientists. In the age of
alchemists and early time of the natural scientists it was simply to
dangerous to openly speak of your ideas and theories without putting your life and limbs at stake in Europe. So, the ideas and results was coded or secretly sent between trusted individuals
within the same field for commenting or simply sharing the progresses. One
such network that included historical figures such as Sir Cheney
Culpeper, Benjamin
Worsley, and Rober
Boyle that were possibly members of the Invisible
College.
When the work of national
philosophers were vindicated by people in power in the 17th
century discussing theories and results became more public accepted. Actually,
in the early days of science the researcher had to perform the
experiment in front of a live audience, trying to convince them – the predecessor of today's
scientific presentation. Eventually the written form went public and
commonly the universities provided the press.
Up into our time the
published articles has been taken on by a large and increasing number
of publishers. Some mastodons almost monopolizing whole sectors and
others grass roots and independent publishers. Today publishing is associated
with costs for the journal due to staff and printing
costs, but it may have gone a bit out of hand.
Exploitation of
researchers in publishing
A scientist today can
rarely avoid frequent invitations to review articles, publishing in new
journals (often for a fee), share their knowledge in book chapters
(often for a fee), not to mention a horde of new conferences inviting
your to give a presentation (but often for the fee of attending). It is
hard to see this as short of exploitation.
This is probably a
“natural” development of how we build our academic sector today.
Scientists work for free, or pays, to share the most recent advances
to the world. The more people you want to reach with the new knowledge – the more expensive it is
(such as making your article Open
Access in most journals).
For comparison, consider a
journalist. Journalists are seen by many scientists as counter
productive to progress since the information they provide to the
public often is distorted and misleading making the increasing of knowledge so much harder. The journalist has
a much wider audience and the journalist get paid to publish! This puts the voice of scientists at a clear disadvantage since damage control within their field is work that is pro bono.
Just, to highlight the
main differences, consider the following generalized financial
differences...
General perspective on costs and salary in
publishing
|
||
Journalist
|
Scientist
|
|
Writer is measured on how much is published and by
the popularity of the published paper?
|
Yes
|
Yes
|
Writer is paid to write?
|
Yes
|
No
|
Writer is paid to review?
|
Yes
|
Rarely
|
Costs can be associated with publishing for
writer?
|
No
|
Yes
|
If made available for free the writer pays for it?
|
No
|
Yes
|
If made available for free or published in larger
quantities the writer is paid more due to extended use of creative
material?
|
Yes
|
No
|
... in short the researcher can suck waxed fruit!
In addition there is a long row of similar things about content, such as integrity, thoroughness of background research, spelling and language, speculation on material presented etc. that are very different depending on whether a scientist or journalist is to publish their material (sadly enough).
Looking at this kind of
set-up it is difficult to publish an article without getting a bitter
taste in the mouth. One do not feel very clever doing so unless you have a huge sense of Utopia (like me). Actually, it is
scary how easy it is to earn fair money for your efforts by taking on
a journalist-hat and write a science-sounding article (qualified or
not) for a pet magazine or the like.
Good journals do exist
One of my favourite
journals is Vet Med Zoot.
It is free to publish in. It is journal controlled by an university.
It has an impact factor (important to bosses of researchers). It has
a good editorial board. It is Open Access. Down side is that MedLine
has not listed it yet and it is thus not searchable by researchers
only using this tool. But, the journal is close to what the original
idea of a publication was supposed to be. More of that please!