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Debating Academia.edu's Place in the Scholarly Communication Ecology
- Author(s):
- Timothy W. Elfenbein (see profile)
- Date:
- 2016
- Group(s):
- Library & Information Science, Scholarly Communication
- Subject(s):
- Open access publishing, Social media, Social networks
- Item Type:
- Presentation
- Meeting Title:
- 4S / EASST Conference
- Meeting Org.:
- Society for the Social Studies of Science / European Association for Science and Technology Studies
- Meeting Loc.:
- Barcelona, Spain
- Meeting Date:
- August 31 to September 3, 2016
- Tag(s):
- academia.edu, Open access, Scholarly communication
- Permanent URL:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/cmjh-zt18
- Abstract:
- As start-up companies reimagine components of the scholarly communication system, are observers too quick to assimilate the new into the known? This presentation discusses the case of the social-network and document-sharing platform Academia.edu and the debates it has stirred. Academia.edu has been subsumed into discussions about scholarly communication through two analogical extensions. First, many librarians see the platform as a digital-document repository for grey literature, akin to subject and institutional repositories that are core infrastructure for green open-access. This perspective leads to evaluations of whether Academia.edu fulfills the functions of a repository. Second, radical open-access advocates see Academia.edu as a data-mining information intermediary, akin to social-media or search-engine companies. This approach folds Academia.edu into critiques of neoliberalism and the commoditization of science. Even as these analogical extensions provide the critical purchase of established analytical frameworks, they hinder the recognition of the new forms and affordances that the Academia.edu platform introduces into scholarly communication.
- Metadata:
- xml
- Status:
- Published
- Last Updated:
- 3 years ago
- License:
- All Rights Reserved
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