Another university press has disassociated itself from
PRISM -- the Partnership for Integrity in Science and Medicine -- an anti-open access advocacy group established by the
Association of American Publishers (AAP). MIT Press director Ellen Faran resigned from AAP's Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division, The Chronicle of Higher Education
reported yesterday (October 4).
Faran told The Chronicle in an Email, "The Prism Web site continues to give the incorrect impression that it has the unanimous support of the Executive Council [of the AAP]."
Our senior editor Alison McCook
blogged last month that the president and director of Columbia University Press, James D. Jordan, resigned from the same AAP division. And as Peter Suber, open access news guru, posted on his
blog , MIT Press joins eight other prominent publishers who have distanced themselves from PRISM since its inception in August of this year.
Some universities have ended their relationships with open access publishers as I
reported in August when Yale did not renew its contract with BioMed Central. But the director of MIT libraries told me for that article that MIT is committed to open access publishing.