Modern Journal Practices: What is Being Done and What You Should Do

modern journal practices; journals; academic journals; copyright; common features; online; online journal; subscription

Traditionally, journals have been read-only. Publishers would print out their volumes and ship them to their subscribers. Sharing was done in person, if at all, and there was little engagement. Now, however, there is a shift to reading nearly everything on the web. Journals, to stay alive and competitive, have needed to embrace modern trends.

Today, modern journals feature several common traits, the most common of which is free, public access to the articles it publishes. This will generally come in two forms – complete access and limited access. As one example of complete access, The Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research offers all of its articles to the public for free, supported by The Artificial Intelligence Access Foundation. The advantage to this is that more people will be able to read the articles simply because they are freely available on the internet. However, many journals, perhaps due to a lack of support or due to tradition, require some sort of membership or payment to view its articles. This practice varies. Astronomy and Astrophysics makes its articles free to view one year after publication (although an author may pay a fee to have the work immediately available). The American Journal of Physics keeps many of its articles behind a paywall, though some are free to be read by the public. Some journals allow a reader to view just one (or any number) of articles for a reduced fee.

Another common trait is making the journal “open source” – that is, the content of the journal is provided by submissions to the journal, as opposed to a staff. These submissions must conform to certain requirements, depending on which journal the article is being submitted to. Some journals charge for an author to submit an article, while others do not; there appears to be a relationship between whether the journal is free to view and whether the journal charges an author to submit content.

In the age of social media, nearly everything is shared. Many journals, such as The American Journal of Physics and Nature, make it easier to share their articles. This is generally done by including icons that would allow the reader to share the link to the article in question directly to their Facebook, Twitter, or even to Reddit page. This, in addition to making the articles freely available, extends the reach one article can have.

http://www.jneurosci.org/content/39/23?current-issue=y

These are the most common modern features of journals. In keeping up with the times, some journals have turned to Twitter, YouTube, and even Instagram. Nature includes a comment section on each of its articles, allowing readers to directly interact with each other and potentially even the author. The American Geographical Union collection gives authors an opportunity to write a “plain language” summary of their article. With a Social Science Research Network account, the user could save their favorite articles to be read later. In addition to a pop-up abstract, The Journal of Neuroscience also displays a significance statement for the article, which shows why the article’s findings were important.

 http://www.jneurosci.org/content/39/23?current-issue=y

Copyright law protects the original content produced by writers and allows the writer to say what can be done with his or her work. The underlying facts, of course, are not protected, but the written ideas and commentary of the writer are protected by copyright law. To protect original content, Creative Commons offers free licensing with a number of options, ranging from reserving no rights to preventing any derivation. Licensing articles will allow readers to share the articles in some way.

So what should you do? Well, that will likely depend on your business model, or how you want to change your business model. If you want your journal to be read more widely, then making your articles (at least a good portion) free to read and shareable will help grow the readership of your journal. Likely, though, this will come at some cost, so you’ll have to find a way to make it up – the current trend seems to be through charging writers for content. This may work well with larger journals, like Nature, but if your current journal is small and relatively unknown, it may be difficult to convince an author to pay to have their article published. Smaller journals may want to strike a careful balance between these options. Comment sections would allow readers to ask questions and even engage with the author on the topic of the article. Finally, a plain language summary of the article would help readers to understand the article before delving in to perhaps complicated and previously never before seen language.

 

Welcome to the first of many blog posts that I will write over the course of my fellowship. In this series, I will be discussing technology, how it’s affecting the legal community, and other questions. Please check back each Friday through early August for these posts.

Michael Harris is a fellow with the Access to Justice Program and is working closely with Legal Services National Technology Assistance Project and Northwest Justice Project. Disclaimer: No journals were contacted in this survey. All research has been completed by Michael Harris.

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