AAP comes under fire on OA and peer review
Angry researchers, scientists and editors have called for
action
against the Association of American Publishers (AAP), one of the
prime movers
behind the
Partnership
for Research Integrity in Science and Medicine.
Announced last month,
PRISM
is a campaign group that has denounced open access (OA) publishing
as “junk science” that is destroying the foundations
of peer review. “Their claim that OA threatens the peer review process is
nothing less than the ‘big lie’ – the propaganda techniques of Dr Goebbels,”
said the founder of the International Journal of Information Management, Tom
Wilson, in a resignation letter.
Well-known scientist and OA supporter Peter Murray-Rust from Cambridge added to the chorus of derision for PRISM. “This initiative is an undisguised coalition to discredit OA publishing and its launch has generated universal dismay and anger in many quarters,” he said. “This campaign is clearly focused on the preservation of the status quo in scholarly publishing (along with the attendant revenues), and not on ensuring that scientific research results are distributed and used as widely as possible,” wrote Heather Joseph, executive director of the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition.
Senior publishers have also quit AAP’s scholarly publishing division. Many are now calling for action against PRISM and the AAP. “I shall in future refuse to undertake unpaid refereeing work for any journal which is not an OA publication,” Wilson said.
The Association of Research Libraries said PRISM’s attacks on OA and peer review “repeatedly conflates policies r egarding access to federally funded research with hypothesised dire consequences”. It pointed out that no demand for public access to federally funded research “altered the traditional practice of peer review”.