Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars
As this issue is being prepared for publication, a consortium of publishers - namely Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press and Taylor & Francis - has gained an advantage in a court case over the issue of copyright infringement against Rameshwari Photocopy Services, a small shop on...
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2013-06-01
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Series: | The South Asianist |
Online Access: | http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/218 |
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doaj-b8e9a4c8c34d436b84e4e951bb8eec6c2021-09-13T09:04:26ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryThe South Asianist2050-487X2013-06-0122218Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholarsMichael HeneiseHeid JerstadAs this issue is being prepared for publication, a consortium of publishers - namely Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press and Taylor & Francis - has gained an advantage in a court case over the issue of copyright infringement against Rameshwari Photocopy Services, a small shop on the Delhi University campus that sells affordable photocopied texts such as course-packs to university students. The defendant cites a provision in Section 52 of the Indian Copyright Act that provides an important exemption in the case of reproductions for educational use. However, prosecutors state that while photocopying a portion of a copyrighted text, such as a chapter, is permissible, the commercial reproduction and distribution of entire texts is ‘piracy.’ Pending a final ruling in the case, an injunction levied on the shop last year forcing it to halt photocopying services was recently upheld by the High Court in Delhi after a recent exam-time appeal by the student community and the university (Desikan 2013). Regardless of the outcome, the case comes at a time when increasingly accessible internet-based technologies offer important opportunities for education in the world's most populous region. This will pose ever-increasing challenges to established publishing practices. We'd like to suggest that these challenges are best met with a new vision; a shift toward open access publishing involving scholars of and from South Asia. This would push the issue decisively, and perhaps offer up a compelling model for scholars who remain ambivalent.http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/218 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Michael Heneise Heid Jerstad |
spellingShingle |
Michael Heneise Heid Jerstad Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars The South Asianist |
author_facet |
Michael Heneise Heid Jerstad |
author_sort |
Michael Heneise |
title |
Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars |
title_short |
Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars |
title_full |
Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars |
title_fullStr |
Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars |
title_full_unstemmed |
Editorial: Why the open access movement needs South Asian scholars |
title_sort |
editorial: why the open access movement needs south asian scholars |
publisher |
University of Edinburgh Library |
series |
The South Asianist |
issn |
2050-487X |
publishDate |
2013-06-01 |
description |
As this issue is being prepared for publication, a consortium of publishers - namely Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press and Taylor & Francis - has gained an advantage in a court case over the issue of copyright infringement against Rameshwari Photocopy Services, a small shop on the Delhi University campus that sells affordable photocopied texts such as course-packs to university students. The defendant cites a provision in Section 52 of the Indian Copyright Act that provides an important exemption in the case of reproductions for educational use. However, prosecutors state that while photocopying a portion of a copyrighted text, such as a chapter, is permissible, the commercial reproduction and distribution of entire texts is ‘piracy.’ Pending a final ruling in the case, an injunction levied on the shop last year forcing it to halt photocopying services was recently upheld by the High Court in Delhi after a recent exam-time appeal by the student community and the university (Desikan 2013). Regardless of the outcome, the case comes at a time when increasingly accessible internet-based technologies offer important opportunities for education in the world's most populous region. This will pose ever-increasing challenges to established publishing practices. We'd like to suggest that these challenges are best met with a new vision; a shift toward open access publishing involving scholars of and from South Asia. This would push the issue decisively, and perhaps offer up a compelling model for scholars who remain ambivalent. |
url |
http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/218 |
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