Prepared by Nancy Maron and Rebecca Kennison with Paul Bracke, Nathan Hall, Isaac Gilman, Kara Malenfant, Charlotte Roh, and Yasmeen Shorish
For many years, the academic and research library workforce has worked to accelerate the transition to more open, inclusive, and equitable systems of scholarship. Enacting change in the scholarly communications environment is complicated by a broad range of issues that need to be addressed: the challenges of the global digital divide and information inequality, decolonization, democratization, the politics of technology, privilege (or lack thereof), the public or common good, unbiased policymaking, etc.
Open and Equitable Scholarly Communications is an action-oriented research agenda designed to provide practical, actionable information for academic librarians; include the perspectives of historically underrepresented communities in order to expand the profession’s understanding of research environments and scholarly communication systems; and point librarians and other scholars toward important research questions to investigate.
Organized into three major priority areas—People, Content, and Systems—each area includes actions that can be taken now and ideas for further research:
Embracing Diversity and Inclusion
Improving the Working Lives of People Engaged in Scholarly Communications
Increasing Awareness Concerning Creators’ Rights
Considering How Value is Assigned to Scholarly Materials
Creating More Representative and Open Collections
Supporting Sustainable Technological Infrastructure
Creating Systems That Permit More Access to More People
Building Mission-Aligned Organizational and Financial Systems
Advancing Innovation in Academic Libraries
Accompanying the agenda are extensive appendices, including an essay on issues of social justice in scholarly communications that have informed this agenda, findings from an online survey, and an annotated list of recommended readings. With your engagement, the effective practices and important research questions in Open and Equitable Scholarly Communications can help accelerate the transformation of the scholarly communications system.