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 Belﬁore and Anna Upchurch (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), pp. 66–76.

As Benjamin Ginsberg points out, there are ways in which all forms of research income grants are desired for universities as sites of direct value extraction from research work, even in the humanities. Ginsberg, The Fall of the Faculty, pp. 180–97.

This is also why Robin Osborne is mistaken: the liberation of research material is not impossible because teaching is bought, but rather it is ideal because teaching is a proﬁt-making activity that can extract surplus value from research.

Raymond Hogler and Michael A. Gross, ‘Journal Rankings and Academic Research: Two Discourses about the Quality of Faculty Work’, Management Communication Quarterly, 23 (2009), 107–26 (p. 111) http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0893318909335419.

Hogler and Gross, ‘Journal Rankings and Academic Research’, pp. 119–21.

For more see Thompson, Books in the Digital Age, p. 21.

Joss Winn, ‘Is an Open Access Journal Article a Commodity?’, Joss Winn, 2014 http://josswinn.org/2014/02/is-an-open-access-journal-article-a-commodity/ [accessed 15 February 2014].

For the explanation of the BBB deﬁnition, see above, p. 21.

Suber, Open Access, pp. 20–7.

Suber, Open Access, pp. 149–61.

Chris Beckett and Simon Inger, Self-Archiving and Journal Subscriptions: Co-Existence or Competition? (Publishing Research Consortium, 2006) http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/13179 [accessed 9 July 2014]; Stevan Harnad, ‘Self-Archiving and Journal Subscriptions: Critique of PRC Study’ http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/harnad/Hypermail/Amsci/5792.html [accessed 9 July 2014].

Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers, ‘ALPSP Survey of Librarians on Factors in Journal Cancellation’, 2006.

Suber, Open Access, p. 158.

Jingfeng Xia and others, ‘A Review of Open Access Self-Archiving Mandate Policies’, Portal: Libraries and the Academy, 12 (2012), 85–102 (p. 98).

House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills Committee, ‘Open Access: Fifth Report of Session 2013–14’, UK Parliament, 2013, p. 18 www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201314/cmselect/cmbis/99/99.pdf [accessed 9 July 2014].

House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills Committee, ‘Open Access: Fifth Report of Session 2013–14’, p. 18.

Rebecca Darley, Daniel Reynolds and Chris Wickham, Open Access Journals in Humanities and Social Science (London: British Academy, 2014).