The Two-Way Street of Open Access Journal Publishing: Flip It and Reverse It

As Open access (OA) is often perceived as the end goal of scholarly publishing, much research has focused on flipping subscription journals to an OA model. Focusing on what can happen after the presumed finish line, this study identifies journals that have converted from OA to a subscription model, and places these “reverse flips” within the greater context of scholarly publishing. In particular, we examine specific journal descriptors, such as access mode, publisher, subject area, society affiliation, article volume, and citation metrics, to deepen our understanding of reverse flips. Our results show that at least 152 actively publishing journals have reverse-flipped since 2005, suggesting that this phenomenon does not constitute merely a few marginal outliers, but instead a common pattern within scholarly publishing. Notably, we found that 62% of reverse flips (N = 95) had not been born-OA journals, but had been founded as subscription journals, and hence have experienced a three-stage transformation from closed to open to closed. We argue that reverse flips present a unique perspective on OA, and that further research would greatly benefit from enhanced data and tools for identifying such cases.

[1]  R. Dingwall,et al.  More than research intermediaries: a descriptive study of the impact and value of learned societies in the UK social sciences , 2017 .

[2]  T. Eger,et al.  The Economics of Open Access: On the Future of Academic Publishing , 2018 .

[3]  Bo-Christer Björk,et al.  A longitudinal study of independent scholar-published open access journals , 2016, PeerJ.

[4]  Ian Rowlands,et al.  Scholarly communication in the digital environment: what do authors want? , 2004, Learn. Publ..

[5]  Adèle Paul-Hus,et al.  The journal coverage of Web of Science and Scopus: a comparative analysis , 2015, Scientometrics.

[6]  Bo-Christer Björk,et al.  A longitudinal comparison of citation rates and growth among open access journals , 2013, J. Informetrics.

[7]  Elizabeth Gadd,et al.  What does ‘green’ open access mean? Tracking twelve years of changes to journal publisher self-archiving policies , 2019, J. Libr. Inf. Sci..

[8]  Stuart Lawson,et al.  Untangling academic publishing: a history of the relationship between commercial interests, academic prestige and the circulation of research , 2017 .

[9]  M. Wacha,et al.  The State of OA: A large-scale analysis of the prevalence and impact of Open Access articles , 2017 .

[10]  Xianwen Wang,et al.  The state and evolution of Gold open access: a country and discipline level analysis , 2018, Aslib J. Inf. Manag..

[11]  Kyle Siler,et al.  Is It Such a Big Deal? On the Cost of Journal Use in the Digital Era , 2018, Coll. Res. Libr..

[12]  B. Björk,et al.  Anatomy of open access publishing: a study of longitudinal development and internal structure , 2012, BMC Medicine.

[13]  Walt Crawford Free electronic refereed journals: getting past the arc of enthusiasm , 2002, Learn. Publ..

[14]  S. Haustein,et al.  The Oligopoly of Academic Publishers in the Digital Era , 2015, PloS one.

[15]  Bo-Christer Björk,et al.  Converting Scholarly Journals to Open Access: A Review of Approaches and Experiences , 2016 .

[16]  Peter Igo-Kemenes,et al.  Highlights from the SOAP project survey. What Scientists Think about Open Access Publishing , 2011, ArXiv.

[17]  Roger C. Schonfeld,et al.  UK survey of academics 2015 , 2013 .

[18]  Claire Bird,et al.  Oxford Journals' adventures in open access , 2008, Learn. Publ..

[19]  Nina Schönfelder APCs—Mirroring the impact factor or legacy of the subscription-based model? , 2018 .

[20]  John Willinsky,et al.  Scholarly Associations and the Economic Viability of Open Access Publishing , 2005, J. Digit. Inf..

[21]  Björn Brembs,et al.  RELX referral to EU competition authority , 2018 .

[22]  Abbas Horri,et al.  Tracking open access journals evolution: Some considerations in open access data collection validation , 2007 .

[23]  Alma Swan,et al.  Authors and open access publishing , 2004, Learn. Publ..

[24]  E. Cattaneo,et al.  Science under politics , 2011, EMBO reports.

[25]  Tove Lohsien,et al.  DOAJ: Directory of Open Access Journals , 2007 .

[26]  N. Jacobs,et al.  Open access : key strategic, technical and economic aspects , 2006 .

[27]  Rob Johnson,et al.  On shifting sands: assessing the financial sustainability of UK learned societies , 2015, Learn. Publ..

[28]  David C. Prosser,et al.  From here to there: a proposed mechanism for transforming journals from closed to open access , 2003, Learn. Publ..

[29]  Alexander Lex,et al.  UpSetR: An R Package for the Visualization of Intersecting Sets and their Properties , 2017 .

[30]  Scott Chamberlain,et al.  Client for Various 'CrossRef' 'APIs' , 2016 .

[31]  M. Egger,et al.  Discipline-specific open access publishing practices and barriers to change: an evidence-based review , 2018, F1000Research.

[32]  B. Björk,et al.  The Development of Open Access Journal Publishing from 1993 to 2009 , 2011, PloS one.

[33]  Yrsa Neuman,et al.  Balancing ideology and feasibility: a case study on adopting and evaluating open access publishing models for a society journal within philosophy , 2017, Inf. Res..

[34]  D. Mietchen,et al.  The move to open access and growth: experience from Journal of Hymenoptera Research , 2013 .

[35]  Bo-Christer Björk,et al.  How subscription‐based scholarly journals can convert to open access: A review of approaches , 2016, Learn. Publ..

[36]  David Bull,et al.  What do societies and publishers want from publishing partnerships? , 2000, Learn. Publ..

[37]  M. McNutt Opinion: “Plan S” falls short for society publishers—and for the researchers they serve , 2019, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[38]  Thed N. van Leeuwen,et al.  Some modifications to the SNIP journal impact indicator , 2012, J. Informetrics.

[39]  Rajendra Akerkar,et al.  Editorial , 1999, Int. J. Comput. Sci. Appl..

[40]  Christopher M. Snyder,et al.  Open Access as a Crude Solution to a Hold‐Up Problem in the Two‐Sided Market for Academic Journals , 2016, The Journal of Industrial Economics.

[41]  Kiley Robert Developing an effective market for Open Access Article Processing Charges , 2014 .

[42]  Judith Winters Editorial. Internet Archaeology - The 20 year journey , 2016 .

[43]  Jeong-Sik Yu ULTRASONOGRAPHY: a new beginning with international open access , 2014, Ultrasonography.

[44]  Stephen Pinfield,et al.  Towards a competitive and sustainable OA market in Europe - a study of the open access market and policy environment , 2017 .

[45]  Albert N. Greco Academic Libraries and the Economics of Scholarly Publishing in the Twenty-First Century: Portfolio Theory, Product Differentiation, Economic Rent, Perfect Price Discrimination, and the Cost of Prestige , 2015 .

[46]  Heather Morrison Small scholar‐led scholarly journals: Can they survive and thrive in an open access future? , 2016, Learn. Publ..

[47]  Peter Ashman What societies want from a publishing partner , 2009, Learn. Publ..

[48]  Nigishi Hotta Brave new world: Our journal has become an Open Access journal , 2015, Journal of diabetes investigation.

[49]  A. Tsai Conflicts between Commercial and Scientific Interests in Pharmaceutical Advertising for Medical Journals , 2003, International journal of health services : planning, administration, evaluation.

[50]  Dieter Häussinger,et al.  Onwards and upwards: European Journal of Medical Research continues as an open access publication , 2012, European Journal of Medical Research.

[51]  Stephen Pinfield,et al.  Monitoring the transition to open access: December 2017 , 2017 .