Kyle
Siler and Koen Frenken (2020). The pricing of open access journals:
Diverse niches and sources of value in academic publishing. Quantitative
Science Studies 1(1), 28–59. https://doi.org/10.1162/qss_a_00016
Open access (OA) publishing has created new academic and economic
niches in contemporary science. OA journals offer numerous publication
outlets with varying editorial philosophies and business models. This
article analyzes the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) (n =
12,127) to identify characteristics of OA academic journals related to
the adoption of article processing charge (APC)-based business models,
as well as the price points of journals that charge APCs. Journal impact
factor (JIF), language, publisher mission, DOAJ Seal, economic and
geographic regions of publishers, peer review duration, and journal
discipline are all significantly related to the adoption and pricing of
journal APCs. Even after accounting for other journal characteristics
(prestige, discipline, publisher country), journals published by
for-profit publishers charge the highest APCs. Journals with status
endowments (JIF, DOAJ Seal) and articles written in English, published
in wealthier regions, and in medical or science-based disciplines are
also relatively costlier. The OA publishing market reveals insights into
forces that create economic and academic value in contemporary science.
Political and institutional inequalities manifest in the varying niches
occupied by different OA journals and publishers.
via https://www.univie.ac.at/voeb/blog/?p=50938
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