糖心Vlog

Stanford pursues talks to save academic press after criticism

University threat to cut $1.7 million annual subsidy generates widespread protest

Published on
April 29, 2019
Last updated
April 30, 2019
Stanford University
Source: iStock
Stanford University

Amid widespread protests, Stanford University has agreed to talks with leaders of Stanford University Press over a threatened withdrawal of funding seen as 鈥渓ikely fatal鈥 for one of the US鈥 premier academic presses.

Stanford, with a $26.5 billion (拢20.5 billion) endowment 鈥 the world鈥檚 third-largest 鈥 told its faculty senate last week that the $1.7 million annual subsidy was proving too much in a 鈥渧ery tight聽budget聽year鈥.

The university began providing the allocation three years ago with the understanding that the assistance would not be permanent, Stanford鈥檚 provost, Persis Drell, told the senate.

But defenders of the press, both within and beyond the campus, have argued that university publishing is understood not to be profitable.

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鈥淚f we use a purely financial metric to assess the value of academic books, the scholarly mission of the academy will be lost,鈥 more than 700 Stanford faculty, students, staff and alumni said in an open聽聽of protest.

A similar number of people from outside Stanford have signed a companion聽聽with the same message, saying that ending the 鈥渕odest annual subsidy鈥 will 鈥渃ripple the press with likely fatal results鈥.

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Professor Drell said in her statement that Stanford had only approved the subsidy as a temporary move 鈥渨ith the assurance from the press that this would be a bridge to a self-sustaining future鈥.

But university administrators have prohibited the press from soliciting its own major donors, the reported. Without the subsidy, it quoted editorial board member and law professor Richard Thompson Ford as saying that the press would begin 鈥渁 death spiral鈥.

Stanford University Press is the oldest academic press in the western US, having been聽established聽as one of the institution鈥檚 founding principles in the late 19th century. It has a staff of 35 and generates about $5 million in revenue from publishing about 130 to 135 books a year, its director, Alan Harvey, told the Chronicle.

A Stanford University spokesman聽told聽the student newspaper, , that leaders of the Stanford University Libraries and Stanford University Press have begun talks on ways to create a sustainable business model for the publisher.

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

A very tight budget year that will see how much reduction to the football program?

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