A comprehensive proposal for reforming copyright law to ensure sustainable public access to research and scholarship. Open access is widely supported by researchers, librarians, scholarly societies, and research funders, as well as large and small publishers. Yet despite this support—and the pandemic's demonstration of the importance of open access for scientific progress—the scholarly publishing market is failing to deliver open access quickly enough. In Copyright's Broken Promise, John Willinsky presents the case for reforming copyright law so that it supports, rather than impedes, public access to research and scholarship. He draws on the legal strategy of statutory licensing to set out the terms and structures by which the Copyright Act could ensure that publishers are fairly compensated for providing immediate open access. What sets Willinsky's analysis apart is its focus on the current state of scholarly publishing. Because copyright offers so little legal support for moving publishing to open access despite the benefit for science, he says it is time to stop regarding the Copyright Act as a law of nature that can only be circumvented, contravened, or temporarily set aside. Specifically, he proposes that the Copyright Act add a new category of work, called “research publications,” which would be subject to statutory licensing. This would allow publishers to receive royalty payments from the principal institutional users (universities, industry R&D, research institutes, and so on) and sponsors of the work (foundations and government agencies), while providing immediate open access.
Author(s): John Willinsky
Edition: 1
Publisher: The MIT Press
Year: 2023
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF | Full TOC
Pages: 189
Tags: Copyright: United States; Open Access Publishing
Cover
Half title
Epigraph
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgments
Bibliographic Note
1 | A Realistic Proposal
No Longer Too Early
The State of Open Access Today
2 | Open Access Consensus
Researcher Responses
The Federal Agencies and Related Initiatives
University Libraries
Scholarly Publishers
Learned Societies
The Iron Law of Consensus
3 | The Constitution’s Intellectual Property Clause
4 | Scholarly Publishing’s Market Failure
Science’s Copyright Problems
The Commercialization of Scholarly Publishing
The Open Access Growth Rate
Market Failure Responses
The Predatory Publishers and the Shadow Library
5 | Law and Scholarship
The Case for Statutory Licensing
6 | A Copyright Amendment for Science
The Collective Management Organization
Designing Statutory Licensing for Open Access
Related Considerations
1 | Incentives and innovations
2 | Publishing costs and profits
3 | Research libraries and funders
4 | Growth in research, journals, book series, and publishers
5 | Financial distress and exigency
6 | Impact on trade publishing
7 | International implications
8 | Opting out
Epilogue: Toward a Global Public Good
Index