steepholm: (Writer)
steepholm ([personal profile] steepholm) wrote2012-01-13 04:16 pm
Entry tags:

Who is the Mugger, Pray, and Who the Mug? (fao UK authors)

If you're a member of the ALCS - the body that licenses educational institutions to copy and use writing for academic purposes - you should probably take a look at this.

In brief, the Government is proposing to scrap all fees for educational copying, and hence all licensing income for authors. Since most journals do not pay their authors, and the amount of paid time officially allocated for research for academics* is about a quarter of that actually spent (judging by my own case), the annual cheque for £120 or so has been very welcome, not least as a reminder that someone out there is reading and using one's work.

It used of course to be said that academics were "paid in promotion" for the time they put into scholarship. Well, twenty-one years, two monographs, two edited collections, a scholarly edition, numerous articles, chapters and introductions, an international research project, and six novels later, I'm still waiting to see the truth of that one. Not that I'm bitter...

* Of course, by no means all the authors of material copied by universities and other educational institutions are paid to do research at all.

Re: Only a blockhead...

[identity profile] malkhos.livejournal.com 2012-01-14 05:53 am (UTC)(link)
I had no idea you were so distinguished and it might indeed be nice to read some of your works.

There is nothing like this in the US. In fact during a recent exchange with you elsewhere I had no idea what to make of your mentioning fees paid for using library books and was baffled. and I was largely educated by British trained scholars, too, but they never mentioned anything of the kind, even in passing.

Re: Only a blockhead...

[identity profile] steepholm.livejournal.com 2012-01-14 12:44 pm (UTC)(link)
I had no idea you were so distinguished and it might indeed be nice to read some of your works.

'Distinguished' is pushing it! But, ever eager for new readers, I've put a list in my reply to [livejournal.com profile] nightspore, should you be interested.

In my experience, academics are very slow to know about these schemes. The PLR scheme we talked about before applies only to borrowings from public libraries, and since most academic tomes are in university libraries it wouldn't earn more than a few pennies for most academics - or so they may believe. My novelist friends are generally well aware of it, however. What's more surprising is that many UK academics aren't aware of the ALCS either...