Open Café

User icon Toby Green
2 February 2024
38 items

This list records all the documents, reports, and websites mentioned in the Open Café Listserv. Open Café, launched by Rick Anderson in February 2024, is dedicated to the free, open, constructive, and civil discussion of issues related to open scholarship – including open access, open science, open data, and adjacent topics. Open Café is a place for people across the full spectrum of viewpoints and perspectives to ask questions, offer opinions, and share information in an environment of mutual respect and openmindedness. You can sign up to Open Café by sending an email message to opencafe-l-subscribe-request@listserv.byu.edu


Paper Mills: Research report from COPE & STM
Peer review in the COVID era: Searching for the right questions
Back to Earth: Landing real-world impact in research evaluation
Scenario Modelling for Open Research Europe
Ending profiteering from publicly-funded research: Tackling the academic publishing oligopoly
Disrupting the subscription journals’ business model for the necessary large-scale transformation to open access
OSI Brief: Deceptive publishing
The Future of Evaluation: Emerging consensus on a more holistic system
Scientific Autonomy, Public Accountability, and the Rise of “Peer Review” in the Cold War United States
Peer Review: recent experience and future directions
Journal publication cost tables and scenarios
Publication Cost and Scenario Model for Open Research Europe
Data Cartels: The Companies That Control and Monopolize Our Information
Rethinking Research Assessment for the Greater Good: Findings from the RPT Project
Current market rates for scholarly publishing services
Details of publications using software by the Public Knowledge Project
The effect of scholarly communication practices on engagement with open access: An Australian study of three disciplines
The Oligopoly of Academic Publishers in the Digital Era
Quantifying Consolidation in the Scholarly Journals Market
Recalibrating the scope of scholarly publishing: A modest step in a vast decolonization process | Quantitative Science Studies