Chinese Journals: appeal for open access

 Chi­nese sci­en­tist appeals for fund­ing to make Chi­nese jour­nals OA05 Sep 2008

Zhu Zuoyan, a recently retired deputy head of the National Sci­ence Foun­da­tion of China (NSFC), has report­edly appealed for fund­ing to make sev­eral Chi­nese jour­nals open access (OA). To boost the country’s sci­en­tific jour­nals, he urged to give pri­or­ity to domes­tic sci­ence publications.

Accord­ing to Zuoyan, government-funded open access jour­nals could be a break­through for sci­ence pub­lish­ing in China. He fur­ther stated that OA jour­nals pri­ori­tise aca­d­e­mic mer­its over com­mer­cial inter­ests. A government-funded open access ini­tia­tive would lessen or elim­i­nate the cost of pub­lish­ing, thereby allow­ing Chi­nese jour­nals to attract more high-quality papers and improve their impact.

Zhu’s remarks come amidst crit­i­cisms that Chi­nese sci­en­tists are pub­lish­ing more in over­seas jour­nals than domes­tic ones. Accord­ing to a study by Wang Bing­sheng, a lead­ing physi­cist and edi­tor of the jour­nal Chi­nese Physics Let­ters, in 2006, over 80 per­cent of Chi­nese physics papers pub­lished in jour­nals, listed in the Sci­ence Cita­tion Index (SCI), were pub­lished in inter­na­tional journals.

Also, it has been observed that sci­ence insti­tu­tions in China often assess the out­puts of their sci­en­tists using the impact fac­tors of the jour­nals where they pub­lish their papers. Many inter­na­tional jour­nals have higher impact fac­tors than domes­tic ones.

This trend among Chi­nese sci­en­tists to pub­lish more in over­seas jour­nals, some say, may endan­ger the exis­tence of the 5,000 sci­en­tific jour­nals pub­lished in China.”

Source: Knowl­edge­s­peak Newsletter.