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Why is there no coordinated action of libraries to negotiate jointly prices and the transformation to Open Access?

The mathematician Gowers recently wrote in his much-noticed blog post "Elsevier - my part in its downfall" about the absurd situation in academic publishing:

A possible explanation is that to do something about the situation requires coordinated action. Even if one library refuses to subscribe to Elsevier journals, plenty of others will feel that they can’t refuse, and Elsevier won’t mind tuch. But if all libraries were prepared to club together and negotiate jointly, doing a kind of reverse bundling — accept this deal or none of us will subscribe to any of your journals — then Elsevier’s profits (which are huge, by the way) would be genuinely threatened. However, it seems unlikely that any such massive coordination between libraries will ever take place.

Can anyone explain why such massive coordination between libraries is so unlikely? Given the fact that the m with serials prices is well known since many years and it affects almost all academic libraries (including Harvard) it's really surprising that the library community seems unable to take jointly a stand against the big publishers.

Christian

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Answer by jdscott50

Consortium is typically the best way to combat these kinds of actions. Libraries do work together regionally in this way. In extreme price hikes, they do collaborate in bans such as the University of California system ban on Nature for their 400% price increase. http://classic.the-scientist.com/blog/display/57491/

Many of the vendors don't even work with consortia or work very well (Overdrive is a good example of that, http://librarianinblack.net/librarianinblack/2011/12/overdrive.html)

The Digital Public Library of America also has this as a focus: http://dp.la/wiki/Main_Page

Much of the time, a library's focus in on their community not someone else's. Even though a price hike effects everyone, the local politics may dictate for them to continue with it rather than rock the boat.

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Answer by Peter Murray

High-energy physics is one discipline that is exploring this through the SCOAP3 project, and there are some libraries and library consortia working on that effort. I think it is much more likely that we will see discipline-oriented efforts succeed (rather than library-oriented efforts) because the authors will be in the drivers seat making the change.

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Answer by dsalo

Why would you think there would be a collective response?

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Answer by kfortney

Believe it or not, there's also the specter of antitrust litigation. The Sherman Antitrust Act "prohibits collective action in restraint of trade. The most significant area of antitrust concern for associations is price-fixing. Price-fixing in the association context is broadly construed to include any concerted effort or action that has an effect on prices, terms or conditions of trade, or on competition." (from the American Association of Law Libraries, http://www.aallnet.org/Archived/Advocacy/Vendor-Relations/faq.html).

For more on this, you may wish to read:

Greene, Hillary, Antitrust Censorship of Economic Protest (March 1, 2010). Duke Law Journal, Vol. 59, No. 6, 2010. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1593184

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Answer by Jenn Riley

Part of the reason is funding and influence from the campus rather than the profession. Academic libraries get their operating funds from their campuses, and their institution's faculty and students are their closest and most primary clientele. (Though of course not the only one.) It's extremely difficult to make a long term and wide view case for the greater good when there are everyday immediate research and teaching needs standing in your building, sending you emails, and accessing articles through your big deal subscriptions. On a daily basis, academic libraries and their directors are answerable more directly to their campus administration rather than to their profession. It takes some very strong leadership, both at the library and the campus level to be able to look beyond these more immediate needs in a systematic way. There's some of that out there, but not enough of it yet to have achieved the kind of coordination that would be necessary to make what Gowers is calling for a reality.

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