Apparently those who lived in or near the Soviet Fortress
for
many years were (understandably) so traumatized by it that
they
can now no longer distinguish between the abuses and
absurdities
of Bolshevik control and genuinely beneficial rules. It
might
help if Jan contemplated whether the longstanding
publish-or-perish mandate (which ensures that researchers
bother
to publish at all) is likewise a Maoist aberration... (or,
for
that matter, anti-smoking and pro-seatbelt rules...)
Stevan Harnad
On Tue, 15 Jan 2008, Jan Szczepanski wrote:
> In his latest talk with with prominent open access
advocates
> Richard Poynder is talking to Dr Alma Swan. It's a
fascinating
> and scary picture that is presented.
>
> In the late fifties Mao Zedong introduced that Great
Leap and now
> fifty years later we are going to take a giant leap
according to
> Dr Swan.
>
> In China backyard steel furnances would do the job; in
Dr Swans
> world it's the mandate and local institutional
repository that is
> going to change the world away from big industry and
the
> capitalist society.
>
> Open Access is inevitable according to Dr Swan, as once
Socialism
> was. Mandate is the key to the Open Access World.
>
> Instead of Five Year Plans we will have Metrics to see
to it that
> the way forward is the Green Way.
>
> The commissars overlooking that the Giant Leap will
happen is
> "Pro-Vice- Chancellors" at the universities,
the real
> reprsentatives of the research communities.
>
> A citatation from Wikipedia:
>
> These reforms (sometimes now referred to as /The Little
Leap
> Forward/) were generally unpopular with the peasants
and usually
> implemented by summoning them to meetings and making
them stay
> there for days and sometimes weeks until they
"voluntarily"
> agreed to join the collective.
>
> A citation by Dr Swan:
>
> AS: Mandates are essential for lots of reasons. One
reason is
> that they make researchers aware of Open Access where
they
> weren't before. The level of ignorance is still very
high. And if
> their university suddenly requires them to do something
it will
> focus researchers' minds. More mportantly, of course, a
mandate
> will actually make them do it, because regardless of
the Open
> Access Advantage, they won't put their research into a
repository
> if they don't have to. It's another bureaucratic thing
to do. And
> they still have worries about the legality of it. Being
told by
> their institution to do it gives them the feeling that
it is safe
> and sensible to do it. So to make them do it you need
to tell
> them that they have to!
>
> Richard Poynder's comment:
>
> Dr Swan has a clear eye for what is needed
>
> How will the future be?
>
> AS: Once the content and the infrastructure are in
place we are
> going to see knowledge take a giant leap. The way to
view it is
> that the last 7-8,000 years or so of human
civilisation's
> struggle for knowledge has taken place on one plane,
determined
> and constrained by what our own brains can absorb, put
together
> and make sense of: now we are about to move to another
plane
> altogether, with the help of machine brains.
>
>> From profit makers to machine brains, what a
future!
>
> Jan
>
> Jan Szczepanski
> Forste bibliotekarie
> Goteborgs universitetsbibliotek
> E-mail: Jan.Szczepanski ub.gu.se
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