The one science reform we can all agree on, but we're too cowardly to do
5 hours ago
- #scientific reform
- #open access
- #academic publishing
- The current academic publishing system is flawed, with universities paying researchers to teach but promoting them based on research funded by external sources like the federal government.
- Peer-reviewed journals do not pay authors or reviewers; instead, they charge authors 'article processing charges' and then paywall the research, profiting from taxpayer-funded work.
- For-profit scientific publishers emerged to handle the logistics of journal production but now exploit the system, charging exorbitant fees while providing minimal services.
- Efforts to reform the system, such as open-access journals and researcher pledges, have largely failed due to academia's competitive nature and lack of collective action.
- SciHub, a piracy site, highlights the system's dysfunction, as researchers often resort to illegal means to access paywalled articles.
- Government intervention is proposed as a solution, with grants stipulating that publicly funded research cannot be published in for-profit journals.
- The Biden and Trump administrations' attempts at reform have been ineffective, allowing publishers to rebrand fees rather than eliminating them.
- The replication crisis and shifting focus to researcher misconduct have diverted attention from the need to address predatory publishing practices.
- A collective effort is needed to eliminate for-profit publishers, as individual actions have proven insufficient to reform the system.