糖心Vlog

Germany edges towards brink in dispute with Elsevier

Publisher and research community remain divided over question of access to international publications

Published on
December 6, 2017
Last updated
December 7, 2017
Giant books
Source: Getty
Title battles: Elsevier鈥檚 Hannfried von Hindenburg looks forward to 鈥榓 new contract鈥 but won鈥檛 speculate on future

With less than a month to go until some of Germany鈥檚 biggest universities and research institutes sever their contracts with the Dutch publishing giant Elsevier, there is still no sign of a deal to allow continued access to the publisher鈥檚 research.

The publisher has said that although a deal was still 鈥減ossible鈥, the two sides are divided over how German institutions should pay for access to research originating from outside the country.

Hannfried von Hindenburg, senior vice-president for global communications at Elsevier, told 糖心Vlog that the company had no problem with moving to a 鈥100 per cent gold open-access world鈥, as demanded by Project Deal, a consortium of German universities, research institutions and funders.

This national alliance, negotiating collectively with Elsevier for the first time, wants to pay per published paper, rather than an ongoing subscription fee for access, as has been the traditional model.

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But the 鈥渟ticking point鈥 is that the German universities want this fee to allow them to access Elsevier publications elsewhere in the world that still require a subscription to read, Dr von Hindenburg said.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 expect to get鈥ontent from America, or elsewhere, for free,鈥 he argued.

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A spokeswoman for the German side said that they were aiming for a fully open-access system where authors, their institutions or countries pay for publication. 鈥淔or more than a decade鈥cientists have demanded the flip of the scholarly publishing system to open access. Elsevier could have done it鈥t their sole discretion, but they refused,鈥 she said.

Negotiations between the two sides broke down about a year ago, leaving at least a dozen German institutions whose contracts expired at the end of 2016聽without access to new Elsevier papers聽鈥 although they were聽quickly reconnected free of charge聽by Elsevier as a sign of 鈥渟upport for German research鈥.

A similar loss of access could happen at the beginning of 2018, although on a bigger scale. Project Deal says that nearly 200 institutions, including some of Germany鈥檚 top-ranked universities, such as the Humboldt University of Berlin, have committed to letting their contracts expire at the end of this year.

Dr von Hindenburg said that he remained positive. 鈥淲e are in touch with the HRK [the German Rectors鈥 Conference] and the negotiation team all the time,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 silence, and there鈥檚 a pretty good relationship on a personal basis.鈥 He said that official meetings with Project Deal were 鈥渙ngoing鈥, although he did not specify when the last one had taken place or when the next one was scheduled to occur.

In contrast, the German side has been bullish, talking up the prospect of seamlessly continuing without new Elsevier contracts,聽 announcing the resignation of German academics from positions at Elsevier journals in October, and saying that 鈥渄iscussions have been discontinued until further notice鈥.

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Asked what would happen at the beginning of next year, Dr von Hindenburg said: 鈥淢y hope would be that champagne corks go off as we celebrate a new contract or some kind of transition deal.鈥

But if there is no deal? 鈥淚 don't speculate," he said.聽

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The Project Deal spokeswoman said that 鈥渢here is no transition/extension planned at the moment鈥. 鈥淎bout 200 institutions have cancelled their contracts with Elsevier, which means that they won鈥檛 have institutional access to the content,鈥 she explained.

Elsevier is also seeking to shift its image away from that of being purely a big publisher towards that of a provider of digital tools that assist researchers in finding papers and applying for grants.

The company is 鈥渁n information and analytics business鈥, Dr von Hindenburg said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 describe ourselves as 鈥榡ust as a publisher鈥.鈥

He acknowledged that the 鈥渕ajority鈥 of the company鈥檚 income from universities still comes from selling them access to journals and books. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not saying 鈥榞oodbye鈥 to publishing,鈥 he said.

But one question for the company is whether selling digital tools can ever be as profitable as its publishing business, especially as a range of other firms offer research search and analytics services.

Rivals such as Google 鈥 which offers Google Scholar 鈥 are not publishers and therefore lack a good grasp of how papers are used 鈥 which publications, for example, end up informing patents, Dr von Hindenburg said.

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david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

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