Social Justice: The Golden Thread in the Openness Movement

Author:

Raju Reggie1ORCID,Claassen Jill1ORCID,De Lillie Kaela1

Affiliation:

1. Chancellor Oppenheimer Library, University of Cape Town Libraries, University of Cape Town, Cape Town 7701, South Africa

Abstract

The current publishing landscape perpetuates biases that continue to exclude those who have been previously marginalized, specifically from the Global South including Africa. Incorporating philanthropy as the only driving principle to openly share knowledge is insufficient to truly empower and be inclusive to those who have been relegated to the periphery of the scholarly communication ecosystem. Social justice principles have to underpin the foundation of this ecosystem, in tandem with philanthropy, to shed light on these exclusionary, systemic publishing practices and processes. This will entail first breaking down these unfair practices and then rebuilding the ecosystem by advancing equity, diversity and inclusion. This paper highlights the current gaps in the openness movement and demonstrates, through an exemplar of a publishing platform, how the publishing landscape can be transformed. The publishing platform employs a multi-tenant model that enables multiple institutions to publish and disseminate knowledge on one shared instance of the software. The continental platform and the tenant model that it utilizes address the technological and infrastructural barriers often experienced in the Global South and Africa, while simultaneously serving as a collective hub for hosting African scholarship. This case study methodology is used to investigate how the alternate publishing route recaptures the philanthropic pillars of the openness movement. The findings provide evidence for a return to the founding principles of the openness movement and, as importantly, demonstrates the impact of open access on student success.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Media Technology,Communication,Business and International Management,Library and Information Sciences

Reference23 articles.

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3. Kwon, D. (2023, February 15). Open-Access Publishing Fees Deter Researchers in the Global South. Available online: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00342-w.

4. Sawahel, W. (2023, February 15). African Scholars Concerned over Biases in Review Processes. Available online: https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20220126085931412.

5. Robinson, M. Personal Communication.

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