European Journal of Taxonomy Laurence Bénichou Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle.

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Presentation transcript:

European Journal of Taxonomy Laurence Bénichou Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle

Scientific Publishing within Natural History Institutions Creation of a network of staff involved in Scientific publishing within Natural History institutions under the European Distributed Institute of Taxonomy => 25 out of the 28 EDIT members are scientific publishers

Aims and Objectives of the network Catch up with the technology Increase dissemination Facilitate the transition to online OA publishing in our fields: take concerted actions to ensure we have crossed the electronic barriers Set up a common policy of dissemination in natural history at European level Reinforce collaborative partnerships Promote dissemination of scientific information in natural history sciences Address the technological changes and strategic decisions Constitute and support a network which can:  Face the technological change  Weight on strategic decisions  Enhance new standard Copenhagen 6 th- 7 th October 2010 Paris 20 th Jan. 2011Paris 8 th Dec Bratislava 22 nd- 23 rd June 2009

25 out of the 28 EDIT members are publishers; publishing ± 65 journals and ± 50 books and monographs series Long standing journals: 1/3 of them are at least 60 year-old journals (16% > 100 year old). 78% are available online and 28% have an impact factor. All the institutions have a same editorial process and policy. but different business models. Most NHIs are traditionally scientific publisher

All barriers to go online “nearly” solved 1. Technical answers have been provided to ensure sustainability of the online support and the access to the journal archives. 2. Nomenclature rules in zoology, botany do now recognise e-only publications as valid. 3. Library exchange programmes 4. Lack of personnel and resources

TaxPub TaxonX CiteBank DwC-A How to face the digital revolution?

EJT, or How to kill three birds with one stone? A joint journal would solve most of the problems identified: Small journals (without IF) that fail to attract good papers Good journals (with IF) that attract more papers than they can publish rapidly Journals commercially outsourced that have lost editorial control (rush for ever increasing IF...) Result: fewer institutional-driven communication channels for (alpha)taxonomy and these usually do not have wide circulation, encounter difficulties to go online and face the technological revolution => All can benefit from a joint initiative like EJT

EJT aims at enabling NHIs to Increase the dissemination Face the digital revolution Control the editorial production

International, fully electronic, fast-track, open-access, peer-reviewed journal in descriptive taxonomy, covering subjects in zoology (incl. Entomology), botany and palaeontology. Ownership shared by the founding institutions Truly global but firmly anchored in Europe Some of the journals published by the institutions members of EJT will merge while others have chosen not to merge, for now. Key aspects: its economic model; pool of resources and expertise; set-up of cross- institutional strategy at European level for taxonomy What is EJT ?

EJT promotes an alternative business model Since it is their mission, NHIs will ensure, by way of a free Open Access (OA) journal, that publicly-funded research is easily, freely, and sustainably accessible to everyone who needs it Free Open Access where  neither the author  nor the reader Has to pay subscription or article-processing charge => Costs are being borne by the founding institutions

EJT empowers publishing staff Most of the time, within NHIs, journals are run by very isolated members of staff facing complex and strategic issues By pooling expertise and resources EJT will enable NHIs to build a strong network of skilled scientific publishing staff to share expertise and ensure the adoption of best practise The lack of technical and editorial staff in the institutions who would be able to address these issues is problematic, and results in a lack of knowledge in publishing field which prevents the institutions from being innovative in their mission to disseminate the scientific results => Learn from a competitive position

EJT promotes the set-up of a cross-institutional strategy Gain in innovation and have a coordinated approach to their adoption Take concerted actions to ensure that their journals and scientific production have crossed the electronic barrier and have moved into the digital world using similar standards and compatible tools Establish a coherent set of policies using the same standards for metadata, data structures, technical standards, etc. => Coordinating institutional resources contributes to excellence, prevents repetition, and increases efficiency in the dissemination of taxonomic data

EJT structures

EJT’s team EDITORS Christian de Muizon Rudy JocquéThomas Janssen Natacha Beau, Meise, Belgium Charlotte Thionois Paris, France Kristiaan Hoedmakers Brussels, Belgium Danny Eibye-Jacobson Copenhagen, Denmark EDITORIAL OFFICE Chris Sleep, London, UK Laurence Bénichou Publications manager Koen Martens, Editor-in Chief

Statistics from 11 th Sept to 8 th February 2013 Number of new taxa described (incl. genera and family) 138 Number of manuscripts submitted70 Number of articles published38 Number of pages published1130 Average pages per articles29,7 Rejection rate28% Average time line between submission and acceptation 15 calendar weeks Average time line between acceptation and publication 4 calendar weeks Average time line between submission and publication 19 calendar weeks

Prospectives Submission to useful databases Providing articles in XML format Promote EJT so as to welcome other institutions Thanks for your attention