ON-MERRIT D3.2 Cumulative Advantage in Open Science and RRI: A Large-Scale Quantitative Study

Autor: Pride, David, Klebel, Thomas, Cancellieri, Matteo, Ross-Hellauer, Tony, Knoth, Petr
Jazyk: angličtina
Předmět:
Popis: This document reports on the research activities conducted in “ON-MERRIT’s” Work Package 3 to identify,measure and assess effects of cumulative advantage in Open Science and RRI with a clear focus on thecreation of research outputs within academia. We conduct four original quantitative research studiesaddressing a range of pertinent research questions, including: Who produces and who consumes open accessresearch literature? How is institutional performance related to the application of RRI policies and OApublishing? Does the uptake of OA publishing change existing hierarchies within academic publishing, and ifso, in which ways across a subset of ON-MERRIT’s target UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) - SDG 2- Zero Hunger, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-Being and SDG 13 - Climate Action? The first research study investigates levels of production and consumption of Open Access (OA) researchliterature globally, measured as the proportion of citations to OA literature, and tests for correlations withgross domestic product (GDP) per capita at the country and continental level. We find moderate correlationsbetween OA production and OA consumption. We find a stronger correlation for higher ranked institutionswhen using ranking data from the Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings (WUR). Wesurprisingly find no correlation between OA production and consumption and GDP (per capita). The second research study investigates how performance or prestige, primarily at the institutional level, isrelated to the application of RRI and OA publishing. We observe that the most highly ranked institutions areboth greater producers and greater consumers of OA. We find a strong overall correlation between publicengagement with science, and RRI policies at the national level. A further interesting final finding is the lackof correlation between how a country performs in terms of gender equality policies and the balance in ratiosof male / female researchers. This is particularly noticeable in the new EU13 countries. Following ON-MERRIT’s focus on three key UN SDGs (SDG Zero Hunger (SDG 2), SDG Health/Well-Being (SDG3) and SDG Climate Action (SDG 13)), the third research study surveys the extent of growth and impact ofthis literature across the analysed SDGs, as well as its structure in terms of who contributes. We find theliterature on SDGs to be increasing by 5-7% per year on average, with an increase in the share of femaleauthorships (27-37% in 2019, depending on the SDG), and persistent institutional stratification. In the fourth study, we continue our investigation of literature related to UN SDGs, focusing on aspects of OApublishing. We analyse how the uptake of OA publishing differs according to dimensions such as gender,academic age, institutional prestige, and country income. We find that well-resourced actors publish morefrequently OA in the SDG areas, as well as publishing in journals with on average higher APCs, which mightworsen already existing structural hierarchies within academia. The four studies presented in this deliverable combine to highlight that it is the higher ranked, moreprosperous and more prestigious institutions that appear best able to adopt, adapt to, and benefit from, theevolving landscape of Open Access publishing. These trends hold true over time, on the global level, andwhen broken down to individual continents and subject areas (SDGs). Persistent structural inequalities incontemporary academic publishing are not necessarily remedied by the Open Science movement, with specific trends such as APC-driven OA publishing potentially exacerbating dynamics of cumulative advantage. If research on key global issues is only driven by well-resourced actors, it risks being oblivious to challengesfaced by societies and communities less embedded into the global production of knowledge. 
Databáze: OpenAIRE