List of open ejournals in Scopus, and WoS

A handy new combo list of the open ejournal titles included in PubMed, Scopus and the ISI Master Journal List…

  Languages and Literatures: 280
  History and Archaeology: 198
  Philosophy and Religion: 162
  Communication and Information: 145
  Arts and Architecture: 137
  General and Multidisciplinary: 43

  Total of the above, at Dec 2012: 965.


As for the omitted Web of Science, the last I heard was that at the end of May 2011 the Transforming Scholarly Communication blog had posted a list (my .xls version) of all open access titles in WoS, showing that…

“The Web of Science database (including Arts & Humanities Citation Index, Science Citation Index, and Social Sciences Citation Index) now indexes close to 1,000 peer-reviewed open access titles”.

But I just found a paper published in 2012, “Challenges for open access journals”, which gave a figure of… “864 open access journals” in arts and humanities in Web of Science.

Chasing Sustainability on the Net

A free online report/book, Chasing Sustainability on the Net (Juvenes Print Tampere, Finland, Oct 2012)…

“International research on 69 journalistic pure players and their business models”

For those not conversant with suit-speak, a “pure play” is an “internet only business”. Might there be some lessons in the report for academic and scholarly ejournals?

New JISC survey on open access monographs

Details of a recent JISC survey in the arts and humanities and social studies. They asked if OA publishers could be allowed to recoup their costs on open access, by selling print-on-demand paper copies of monographs. I guess this is consultation on the medium-range future, since the UK Research Councils and the HEFCE are both targetting journal articles and conference papers for OA first, not books (and thus presumably not monographs) or data.

What I’d want (and might pay for during a research project, instead of a free PDF) wouldn’t be print, but a nicely formatted .mobi ebook file for my Kindle ereader. But if a publisher’s Kindle monograph costs £65 (inc. shipping from the USA) and a simple PDF to Kindle operation is free, why would I not choose the latter, mangled formatting and all? Many others will simply read their PDFs on an iPad, Kindle Fire or other tablet.

However, it seems that for the moment print rules…

“Print still dominates reading preferences, but less so for early career academics”

Yet I really can’t see university managers standing for academics charging the departmental credit-card £50+ a time to get print monographs, once the PDFs are free online (as the legal requirement for OA widens out from just “research council funded” works to encompass all taxpayer-funded works). To save costs managers might present their stick-in-the-mud academics with shiny new £150 tablets, and tell them to read all future PDFs on that or lump it. Or, if print really is vital, the university might install a hired print-on-demand book-printing machine in the university’s printing works.

Also some interesting statistics in the article, from a JISC survey of 690 (presumably all in the UK)…

“Creative Commons licensing is not well understood by humanities and social science academics, not only was awareness of CC low at only 40 per cent […] Familiarity with open access is at 30 per cent and awareness is at 50 per cent, although this was before the Finch report” […]

Cairn Eng

Cairn is reportedly developing

“…an international edition which will provide an interface in English, enabling non-French speaking scholars to discover content of interest published in French.”

Although Google already handles that interface translation automatically, and in a very speedy and seamless manner. And most Cairn articles appear to have substantial abstracts in English, complete with English keywords. JURN already directly indexes the circa-239,000 open PDF articles that are freely available via Cairn.