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SALALM 60 SERIALS ACQUISITIONS IN THE DIGITAL “FUTURE”: IF IT’S ALL ONLINE, WHAT’S THE PROBLEM? 2015 By Jennifer Osorio UCLA.

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Presentation on theme: "SALALM 60 SERIALS ACQUISITIONS IN THE DIGITAL “FUTURE”: IF IT’S ALL ONLINE, WHAT’S THE PROBLEM? 2015 By Jennifer Osorio UCLA."— Presentation transcript:

1 SALALM 60 SERIALS ACQUISITIONS IN THE DIGITAL “FUTURE”: IF IT’S ALL ONLINE, WHAT’S THE PROBLEM? 2015 By Jennifer Osorio UCLA

2 QUESTIONS? Is Open Access in Latin America the same as in the United States? How are the models different? What, if any, are the implications for libraries and collections of the rapid adoption of OA in Latin America? Are there dangers to the breakneck speed of OA adoption in Latin America?

3 TRANSFORMATION OF LATIN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
From "state-building" and professionalization to a research intensive model more like American universities In 1980’s establishment of evaluation programs and panels (ex: Sistema Nacional de Investigadores in Mexico) Three fold growth in number of graduate degrees granted between ; fastest growth was in Brazil, but Argentina, Colombia, Uruguay, and Ecuador also saw a rapid rise

4 MEASURING QUALITY IN LATIN AMERICA
Panels initially use traditional citation indexes (ex: SCI) Privilege English-language, international journals Panels take same approach for all disciplines Few Latin American venues with an international profile Need for more visibility for Latin American journals

5 RAPID GROWTH OF OA Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO): 1997, interdisciplinary, although geared towards "hard" sciences Red de Revistas Científicas de América Latina y el Caribe, España y Portugal (RedALyC): 2002, interdisciplinary, although geared towards social sciences Other: Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales (CLACSO), institutional repositories in Brazil, Colombia, Argentina, etc. In 2003, 42% of OA journals indexed in Science Citation Index are from Latin America As of 2010, almost 74% of OA journals in SCOPUS were from Latin America

6 PROCESSES FOR APPROVAL
Criteria varies widely Some countries have approved list of journals (Argentina) Others use complicated lists of criteria to rank journals (Colombia) Most still give more weight to international publications (Venezuela is a recent exception) OA Portals require: editorial boards, peer review system, regular publication schedule, abstracts/keywords in English, etc.

7 OA PORTALS = APPROVED? Funding for SciELO, RedALyC and other portals often comes from the same agencies that fund research-approval panels Criteria is identical in some cases, or in others the mere fact of inclusion in a portal is enough to win it approval Assumption is that inclusion in OA portals equals quality

8 DIFFERENT MODELS FOR OA
Latin America Motivated by need for more visisibility Accrediting/evaulation commissions decide quality Close ties between accrediting commissions and OA portals Inclusion in OA portals = high quality North America Motivated by need to lower costs ("serials crisis") /philosophical beliefs Peer review system ensures quality Distributed responsibility Inclusion in OA portals not linked to perception of quality

9 GREAT! RIGHT? Image used under Creative Commons license, Flickr, MomentCaptured1

10 PORTAL PRIORITIES Internationalization over regionality
The hard sciences over the social sciences English over Spanish/Portuguese Large communities over small Generic over specialized Well-funded, stable over struggling

11 WHAT IS LOST? Regional or provincial voices Venues for new scholars
Voices in other languages Marginalized voices (communities, those w/o digital access) Under-funded or under-manned publications Erratic publications

12 NEO-COLONIALISM (YOU KNEW IT HAD TO COME UP)
Is OA in Latin America based on hegemonic or colonial structures? Does it privilege the privileged? If it is and it does – and some scholars argue this --what can be done about it?

13 SERIALS COLLECTING TODAY
Seek out representative voices not included in the portals Disciplines/areas of research with small or specialized audiences Marginalized communities Dissenting voices Prioritize and seek out regional, national, and local titles in collections Search out research in other formats

14 ADDITIONAL READING Alperin, J.P, Fischman, G.E., & Willinsky, J. (2010). Scholarly communication strategies in Latin America’s research intensive universities. Revista Educacion Superior y Sociedad. Alperin, J.P, Fischman, G.E., & Willinsky, J. (2010). Visibility and quality in Spanish-language Latin American scholarly publishing. Information Technologies and International Development, 6(4), 1-21. Bosch, S., & Henderson, K. (2014). Steps down the evolutionary road. Library Journal, 139(7), Bohannon, J. (4 Oct 2013). Who's Afraid of Peer Review? Science, 6154 (342), Overview of OA in Latin America. (June 2014). platforms/goap/access-by-region/latin-america-and-the-caribbean/


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