Should Indian researchers pay to get their work published?

Muthu, Madhan and Kimidi, Siva Shankar and Gunasekaran, Subbiah and Arunachalam, Subbiah (2017) Should Indian researchers pay to get their work published? Current Science, 112 (4). pp. 703-713. ISSN 0011-3891

[img]
Preview
Text (Open access)
Current-science_2017_0703.pdf - Published Version

Download (351kB) | Preview

Abstract

We raise the financial and ethical issue of paying for getting papers published in professional journals. Indian researchers have published more than 37,000 papers in over 880 open access journals from 61 countries in the five years 2010-14 as seen from Science Citation Index Expanded. This accounts for about 14.4% of India’s overall publication output, considerably higher than the 11.6% from the world. Indian authors have used 488 OA journals levying article processing charge (APC), ranging from INR 500 to US$5,000, in the five years to publish about 15,400 papers. More than half of these papers were published in just 13 journals. PLoS One and Current Science are the OA journals Indian researchers use most often. Most leading Indian journals are open access and they do not charge APC. Use of OA journals levying APC has increased over the four years from 242 journls and 2557 papers in 2010 to 328 journals and 3,634 papers in 2014. There has been an increase in the use of non-APC journals as well, but at a lower pace. About 27% of all Indian papers in OA journals are in ‘Clinical Medicine,’ and 11.7% in ‘Chemistry.’ Indian researchers have used nine mega journals to publish 3,100 papers. We estimate that India is potentially spending about US$2.4 million annually on APCs and suggest that it would be prudent for Indian authors to make their work freely available through interoperable repositories, a trend that is growing significantly in Latin America and China, especially when research is facing a funding crunch. We further suggest bringing all Indian OA journals on to a single platform similar to SciELO, and all repositories be harvested by CSIR-URDIP which is already managing the OA repositories of the laboratories of CSIR, DBT and DST. Such resource sharing will not only result in enhanced efficiency and reduced overall costs but also facilitate use of standard metadata among repositories.

[error in script]
IITH Creators:
IITH CreatorsORCiD
Item Type: Article
Additional Information: We thank Peter Suber , Director, Harvard Office for Scholarly Communication, USA and Ms Barbara Kirsop , Electronic Publishing Trust for Development, UK for their valuable comments
Uncontrolled Keywords: Article processing charge, hybrid OA journals, institutional repositories, OA policy, open access journals
Subjects: Others > Information Science & Library Science
Social sciences > Asian Studies
Divisions: IITH News coverage
Depositing User: Team Library
Date Deposited: 31 Oct 2016 04:00
Last Modified: 27 Jul 2022 07:14
URI: http://raiithold.iith.ac.in/id/eprint/2848
Publisher URL: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs/v112/i04/703-713
OA policy: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/issn/0011-3891/
Related URLs:

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item
Statistics for RAIITH ePrint 2848 Statistics for this ePrint Item