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Fair Chaos: What Happens After Open Access?

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Croatia celebrated Open Access Week in both Zagreb and Rijeka, this year. In Zagreb, a Croatian declaration to Open Access was presented, and in Rijeka, we decided for an open discussion on what authors will be like in the future, whether they will see a closed or an open scholarly system more fit for their webby research.

Round Table: David Blažević, Senka Tomljanović

The invited speakers were Senka Tomljanović, the head of University Library in Rijeka, David Blažević, a young scientist, a junior researcher at the Faculty of Engineering in Rijeka, Sara Uhač, a PhD student at the University of Lugano in Switzerland, experienced in journal/open access publishing, and Kristina Posilović, an assistant professor and a member of a community of poets/writers who mash up their texts online. As our special guest, we welcomed Tomislav Medak from the Multimedia Institute in Zagreb, Croatia, previously a project leader of Croatian Creative Commons, a philosopher, and a member of the Zagreb based theatre company BADco.

The given theme of the table was the value of a street cred of scholars, picked up through social media such as Twitter, Facebook, or reference managers such as Mendeley and Zotero. Another theme was the creation of a living text online, the difference between an author and a reader, and the nature of their dialogue. Finally, considering this dialogue and the communication/interaction as the focus of writing, we were to answer the question whether authors will benefit from making their texts available online, for free.

Round Table: Kristina Posilović, Sara Uhač

What is impeding communication/interaction today? “The non-availability of relevant information,” David commented, “what is the value added by publishers who still keep the systems closed, or journals available at a price of 30 USD per article?” “Why won’t they let us buy kindle and iPads for libraries?” Senka asked. She, of course, mentioned the well known rise in journal prices, and the cuts made to the library budget. More and more, we choose to find relevant texts from libraries with pirated material, due to so many obstacles that university libraries face. Tomislav reminded that we keep confusing the author creation with the creation of “original author pieces.” He even warned of the recent “publish less” trend among authors and their mentors, in order to keep their reputation steady. “Who has the access to reputation,” that is the question we should ask. We all agreed that the ultimate goal should be to encourage the free flow of scientific information. Any system that pushes towards doing less or more slow, or more expensive – is not only impeding research, but acting as a schizoid filter, that breaks the thought process. “Our diagnosis is a mental disorder,” Kristina commented.

Round Table: Tomislav Medak

While inspecting cognition, the concept of cognitive capitalism was mentioned in the audience, a theory centered around the accumulation of immaterial assets protected through IP rights. “We are creating false dichotomy while asking whether we should make our works open access or not,” since “open access is obviously imminent.” Or, as Sara commented, “as far as the publishing industry is considered, it needs to adapt or die.” But, what happens after Open Access? Maybe we should focus on discussing the new value creation once we move to the production of knowledge as the production of – wealth. “The real reforms can only happen on a society level,” Tomislav reminded us, “and the only real instruments that we can use to achieve such reforms are institutions that dictate the social roles.” Or, government bodies? There, we should attempt at upsetting the (dis)order?

“Oh, and you know the thing about chaos? It’s fair!”
Joker, The Dark Knight
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Credit

Photo: Silvia Vlaše, The Dark Knight reference: Marko Luka Zubčić


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