Transforming scholarly communications: The part played by the pandemic and the contribution of early career researchers

Author:

Nicholas David1ORCID,Herman Eti1ORCID,Boukacem‐Zeghmouri Cherifa2ORCID,Rodríguez‐Bravo Blanca3ORCID,Watkinson Anthony1ORCID,Abrizah Abdullah4ORCID,Świgoń Marzena5ORCID,Xu Jie6ORCID,Sims David7ORCID,Serbina Galina8ORCID,Clark David1ORCID,Jamali Hamid. R.9ORCID,Tenopir Carol7ORCID,Allard Suzie7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CIBER Research Newbury West Berkshire UK

2. Computer Science Department Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 Villeurbanne France

3. Área de Biblioteconomía y Documentación, Universidad de León León Spain

4. Department of Library &Information Science University of Malaya Kuala Lumpur Malaysia

5. Wydział Humanistyczny, Uniwersytet Warminsko‐Mazurski Olsztyn Poland

6. School of Information Management Wuhan University Wuhan China

7. School of Information Sciences University of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee USA

8. TSU Research Library Tomsk State University Tomsk Russia

9. School of Information and Communication Studies Charles Sturt University Wagga Wagga New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractInvestigates whether junior researchers believe that the scholarly communication system is changing in a significant way, whether they have contributed to the changes they envisaged, whether the pandemic has fast‐forwarded change and what they thought a transformed system might look like. The data are drawn from the Harbingers‐2 project, which investigated the impact of the pandemic on the scholarly communications attitudes and behaviours of early career researchers (ECRs), employing repeat interviewing with around 170 science and social science junior researchers from eight countries. The article focuses on the findings of the last of three rounds of interviews, with comparisons made with the first round, held 18 months earlier, when the pandemic was most active. A majority of ECRs thought that there had been significant changes in the scholarly system, and a large minority thought that the pandemic was responsible. Most of them wanted a system that was more open in terms of open access and open data, with a third taking personal action to bring about change.

Funder

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Communication,Library and Information Sciences

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