Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal

Open access (OA) publications play an important role for academia, policy-makers, and practitioners. Universities and research institutions set up OA policies and provide authors different types of support for engaging in OA activities. This paper presents a case study on OA publishing in a scholarl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Noella Edelmann, Judith Schoßböck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Publications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/8/3/44
id doaj-091ccdb4cfa64013bf31233b0e65682f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-091ccdb4cfa64013bf31233b0e65682f2020-11-25T02:32:55ZengMDPI AGPublications2304-67752020-09-018444410.3390/publications8030044Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led JournalNoella Edelmann0Judith Schoßböck1Department for E-Governance and Administration, Danube University Krems, A-3500 Krems, AustriaDepartment for E-Governance and Administration, Danube University Krems, A-3500 Krems, AustriaOpen access (OA) publications play an important role for academia, policy-makers, and practitioners. Universities and research institutions set up OA policies and provide authors different types of support for engaging in OA activities. This paper presents a case study on OA publishing in a scholarly community, drawing on qualitative and quantitative data gained from workshops and a survey. As the authors are the managing editors of the <i>OA eJournal for eDemocracy and Open Government</i> (JeDEM), the aim was to collect data and insights on the publication choices of authors interested in OA publishing and other crucial factors such as personal attitudes to publishing, institutional context, and digital literacy in order to improve the journal. In the first phase, two workshops with different stakeholders were held at the Conference for e-Democracy and Open Government (CeDEM) held in Austria and in South Korea in 2016. In the second phase, an online survey was sent to all the users of the e-journal JeDEM in October 2019. From the workshops, key differences regarding OA perception and strategies between the stakeholder groups were derived. Participants strongly perceived OA publishing as a highly individualist matter embedded within a publishing culture emphasizing reputation and rankings. The survey results, however, showed that institutional support differs considerably for authors. Factors such as visibility, reputation, and impact play the biggest role for the motivation to publish OA. The results from both inquiries provide a better understanding of OA publishing attitudes and the relevant digital literacies but also suggest the need to investigate further the enablers or difficulties of scholarship, particularly in a digital context. They clearly point to the potential of regularly addressing the users of the journal as well as communicating with them the more nuanced aspects of OA publishing, non-traditional metrics, or respective digital literacies, in order to reduce misconceptions about OA and to support critical stances.https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/8/3/44open accessopen scienceopen scholarshipjournalspoliciespublishing strategies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Noella Edelmann
Judith Schoßböck
spellingShingle Noella Edelmann
Judith Schoßböck
Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal
Publications
open access
open science
open scholarship
journals
policies
publishing strategies
author_facet Noella Edelmann
Judith Schoßböck
author_sort Noella Edelmann
title Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal
title_short Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal
title_full Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal
title_fullStr Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal
title_full_unstemmed Open Access Perceptions, Strategies, and Digital Literacies: A Case Study of a Scholarly-Led Journal
title_sort open access perceptions, strategies, and digital literacies: a case study of a scholarly-led journal
publisher MDPI AG
series Publications
issn 2304-6775
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Open access (OA) publications play an important role for academia, policy-makers, and practitioners. Universities and research institutions set up OA policies and provide authors different types of support for engaging in OA activities. This paper presents a case study on OA publishing in a scholarly community, drawing on qualitative and quantitative data gained from workshops and a survey. As the authors are the managing editors of the <i>OA eJournal for eDemocracy and Open Government</i> (JeDEM), the aim was to collect data and insights on the publication choices of authors interested in OA publishing and other crucial factors such as personal attitudes to publishing, institutional context, and digital literacy in order to improve the journal. In the first phase, two workshops with different stakeholders were held at the Conference for e-Democracy and Open Government (CeDEM) held in Austria and in South Korea in 2016. In the second phase, an online survey was sent to all the users of the e-journal JeDEM in October 2019. From the workshops, key differences regarding OA perception and strategies between the stakeholder groups were derived. Participants strongly perceived OA publishing as a highly individualist matter embedded within a publishing culture emphasizing reputation and rankings. The survey results, however, showed that institutional support differs considerably for authors. Factors such as visibility, reputation, and impact play the biggest role for the motivation to publish OA. The results from both inquiries provide a better understanding of OA publishing attitudes and the relevant digital literacies but also suggest the need to investigate further the enablers or difficulties of scholarship, particularly in a digital context. They clearly point to the potential of regularly addressing the users of the journal as well as communicating with them the more nuanced aspects of OA publishing, non-traditional metrics, or respective digital literacies, in order to reduce misconceptions about OA and to support critical stances.
topic open access
open science
open scholarship
journals
policies
publishing strategies
url https://www.mdpi.com/2304-6775/8/3/44
work_keys_str_mv AT noellaedelmann openaccessperceptionsstrategiesanddigitalliteraciesacasestudyofascholarlyledjournal
AT judithschoßbock openaccessperceptionsstrategiesanddigitalliteraciesacasestudyofascholarlyledjournal
_version_ 1724816758095740928