工作

Sarah Severson, Jessica Lange
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引用次数: 4

摘要

本文的目的是记录加拿大非商业学术期刊中劳动是如何划分和补偿的(包括货币和非货币)。本研究为未来非商业学术出版的可持续性研究提供了参考。由于劳动力对于这些期刊的持续成功至关重要,因此了解劳动力的范围(即,有多少职位,每个职位多少小时),范围(即,承担哪些任务以及谁负责这些任务)和成本(货币或非货币)对于确保加拿大非商业学术期刊的可持续性至关重要。为了调查目前的做法,作者向符合上述纳入标准的484家加拿大期刊分发了一项调查。该调查由两部分组成:期刊的劳动分工(即,有多少个职位,这些职位的职责是什么,这些职位每周有多少工作时间)和薪酬(即,期刊是否向其编辑团队成员提供货币或非货币薪酬,哪些职位获得薪酬,这些资金的来源是什么)。作者收到119份回复,回复率为25%。主要发现是,大多数受访者至少为一个期刊职位提供薪酬,这些资金主要来自赞助组织(即附属机构/大学院系和学术协会)。其他调查结果还包括,薪酬最高的三个职位是编辑、编辑助理和总编辑。有报酬的职位,如翻译、平面设计师和文字编辑,经常被外包出去。编辑团队成员之间的任务分配各不相同;然而,总编辑和管理编辑负责的任务种类最多。编辑助理和总编辑的工作时间往往比其他职位更长。此外,期刊产量与编辑团队规模有关,较大的团队平均比较小的团队产出更多的期刊。自由文本注释中反复出现的主题是工作量大、缺乏补偿和缺乏识别。本文提供了加拿大非商业学术出版中劳动报酬的程度和变化的实证证据。它提供了当前非商业期刊实践的数据,这些数据将对图书馆出版商、期刊编辑和加拿大学术出版的其他利益相关者感兴趣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Work It
The goal of this paper is to document how labour is divided and compensated (both monetarily and non-monetarily) in Canadian non-commercial scholarly journals. This study informs future research on sustainability in non-commercial academic publishing. As labour is essential for the continued success of these journals, understanding the extent (i.e., how many positions, how many hours per position), scope (i.e., which tasks are undertaken and who is responsible for them), and cost (monetary or non-monetary) of this labour will be critical in ensuring the sustainability of non-commercial academic journals in Canada. To investigate current practices, the authors distributed a survey to 484 Canadian journals meeting the above inclusion criteria. The survey was composed of two sections: how labour is divided at a journal (i.e., how many positions are there, what are the responsibilities of these positions, and how many work hours per week are dedicated to these positions) and compensation (i.e., does the journal provide monetary or non-monetary compensation to members of its editorial team, which positions receive compensation, and what is the source of these funds). The authors received 119 responses, for a 25 percent response rate. Among the main findings are that the majority of respondents compensate at least one journal position and that the source of these funds comes primarily from sponsoring organizations (i.e., affiliated institutional/university departments and scholarly associations). Additional findings include that the top three most commonly compensated positions are copyeditor, editorial assistant, and managing editor. Compensated positions such as translator, graphic designer, and copyeditor are often contracted out. Task distribution amongst editorial team members varies; however, editors-in-chief and managing editors are responsible for the greatest variety of tasks. Editorial assistants and managing editors tend to work more hours than other positions. Additionally, journal production was related to editorial team size, with larger teams producing more volumes on average than smaller ones. Recurring themes in free-text comments were large workloads, lack of compensation, and lack of recognition. This paper provides empirical evidence of the extent and variation of labour and compensation in Canadian non-commercial scholarly publishing. It provides data on current non-commercial journal practices which will be of interest to library publishers, journal editors, and other stakeholders in Canadian scholarly publishing.
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