July 13, 2021 (Cambridge, MA)—Thanks to the support of libraries participating in Direct to Open (D2O), the MIT Press will publish its full list of 2022 scholarly monographs and edited collections open access on the MIT Press Direct platform. Thirty-seven of the eighty works are already openly available to readers around the world, and a full list of titles included in the model this calendar year may be found at the end of this announcement.
D2O moves scholarly books from a solely market-based, purchase model, where individuals and libraries buy single eBooks, to a collaborative, library-supported open access model. Instead of purchasing a title once for a single collection, libraries now have the opportunity to fund them one time for the world through participant fees.
“We are thrilled to reach this milestone and make the Press’s 2022 monographs openly available,” said Amy Brand, director and publisher of the MIT Press. “In partnership with the D2O member libraries, we are creating a sustainable path for open access scholarship. ”
In its first year, 240 libraries from around the globe committed to support D2O. The Press has also entered into an all-in agreement with Big Ten Academic Alliance as well as central licensing and invoicing agreements with Council of Australian University Librarians, Center for Research Libraries; Greater Western Library Alliance, MOBIUS, Northeast Research Libraries, Jisc, Partnership for Academic Library Collaboration and Innovation, SCELC, and Lyrasis.
“The MIT Press is committed to forging an affordable and equitable future for open access books rooted in nonprofit values,” said Amy Harris, Senior Manager, Library Relations and Sales at the MIT Press. “Together with our participating libraries and our consortia partners, we’re building a future for scholarly books where authors can reap the full benefits of the scholarly publishing system regardless of their institutional affiliation or funding.”
“As an academic author, I don’t write for royalties as much as for impact,” said Georg F. Striedter, Professor, Neurobiology and Behavior, University of California, Irvine and MIT Press author. “The goal is to be of use to as many readers as possible—across the world, rich or poor. Therefore I am thrilled that the MIT Press and a consortium of libraries (including my own at UC Irvine) are making it possible for the electronic version of my forthcoming book to be open access. I believe this is the future of academic book publishing, or at least its bleeding edge.”
In the coming year, the Press will seek to expand library participation in the model. Supporting libraries not only contribute to opening frontlist titles, but also receive exclusive participation benefits including term access to a backlist collection of ~2,500 titles. To learn more about Direct to Open, or to sign-up to become a participating library, visit direct.mit.edu/books/pages/direct-to-open or contact the MIT Press library partnerships and sales team.
List of MIT Press 2022 monographs and edited collections included in the Direct to Open Model:
- Christopher Baber, Embodying Design: An Applied Science of Radical Embodied Cognition
- Edited by Jonathan Barnes and Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel, Prosodic Theory and Practice
- John M. Beggs, The Cortex and the Critical Point: Understanding the Power of Emergence
- Alan F. Blackwell, Emma Cocker, Geoff Cox, Alex McLean and Thor Magnusson, Live Coding: A User's Manual
- Olivier Blanchard, Fiscal Policy under Low Interest Rates
- Angelo Cangelosi, and Minoru Asada, Cognitive Robotics: Imagined Histories of Sexual Technologies
- Marcus Carter, Treacherous Play
- Michael Century, Northern Sparks: Innovation, Technology Policy, and the Arts in Canada from Expo 67 to the Internet Age
- Katerina Cizek and William Uricchio, Collective Wisdom: Co-Creating Media for Equity and Justice
- Jessica Clements and Kari Nixon, Optimal Motherhood and Other Lies Facebook Told Us: Assembling the Networked Ethos of Contemporary Maternity Advice
- Edited by Felipe De Brigard and Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Neuroscience and Philosophy
- Carl DiSalvo, Design as Democratic Inquiry: Putting Experimental Civics into Practice
- G. William Domhoff, The Neurocognitive Theory of Dreaming: The Where, How, When, What, and Why of Dreams
- Igor Douven, The Art of Abduction
- Matthew N. Eisler, Age of Auto Electric: Environment, Energy, and the Quest for: the Sustainable Car
- Lindsay Ems, Virtually Amish: Preserving Community at the Internet's Margins
- N. J. Enfield and Jack Sidnell, Consequences of Language: From Primary to Enhanced Intersubjectivity
- Elena Esposito, Artificial Communication: How Algorithms Produce Social Intelligence
- Sonia Fizek, Playing at a Distance: Borderlands of Video Game Aesthetic
- Sheila R. Foster and Christian Iaione, Co-Cities: Innovative Transitions toward Just and Self-Sustaining Communities
- Daniel D. Garcia-Swartz and Martin Campbell-Kelly, Cellular: An Economic and Business History of the International Mobile-Phone Industry
- Robert W. Gehl and Sean T Lawson, Social Engineering: How Crowdmasters, Phreaks, Hackers, and Trolls Created a New Form of Manipulative Communication
- Vinod Goel, Reason and Less: Pursuing Food, Sex, and Politics
- Edited by Kian Goh, Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris and Vinit Mukhija, Just Urban Design: The Struggle for a Public City
- Abigail Gosselin, Mental Patient: Psychiatric Ethics from a Patient's Perspective
- Edited by Mark Graham and Fabian Ferrari, Digital Work in the Planetary Market
- Marco Grasso, From Big Oil to Big Green: Holding the Oil Industry to Account for the Climate Crisis
- Chris Haufe, How Knowledge Grows: The Evolutionary Development of Scientific Practice
- Julian Huxley, The Individual in the Animal Kingdom
- Alexander Refsum Jensenius, Sound Actions: Conceptualizing Musical Instruments
- Melissa Kagen, Wandering Games
- Edited by Siu-Cheung Kong and Harold Abelson, Computational Thinking Education in K–12: Artificial Intelligence Literacy and Physical Computing
- Howard Lasnik and Juan Uriagereka, Structure: Concepts, Consequences, Interactions
- Brice Laurent, European Objects: The Troubled Dreams of Harmonization
- Gabriel Levy, Beyond Heaven and Earth: A Cognitive Theory of Religion
- Max Liboiron and Josh Lepawsky, Discard Studies: Wasting, Systems, and Power
- Christos Lynteris, Visual Plague: The Emergence of Epidemic Photography
- Edited by Sheila L. Macrine and Jennifer M.B. Fugate, Movement Matters: How Embodied Cognition Informs Teaching and Learning
- Alan Meades, Arcade Britannia: A Social History of the British Amusement Arcade
- Shigeru Miyagawa, Syntax in the Treetops
- Cyrus C. M. Mody, The Squares: US Physical and Engineering Scientists in the Long 1970s
- Alexander Monea, The Digital Closet: How the Internet Became Straight
- Eric Monteiro, Digital Oil: Machineries of Knowing
- Robert D. Montoya, Power of Position: Classfication and the Biodiversity Sciences
- Vinit Mukhija, Remaking the American Dream: The Informal and Formal Transformation of Single-Family Housing Cities
- David Nemer, Technology of the Oppressed: Inequity and the Digital Mundane in Favelas of Brazil
- Nancy J. Nersessian, Interdisciplinarity in the Making: Models and Methods in Frontier Science
- Michael Nitsche, Vital Media: Making, Design, and Expression for Humans and Other Materials
- Linda A. Parker, Erin M. Rock and Raphael Mechoulam, CBD: What Does the Science Say?
- Thomas Parr, Giovanni Pezzulo and Karl J. Friston, Active Inference: The Free Energy Principle in Mind, Brain, and Behavior
- Karine E. Peschard Seed Activism: Patent Politics and Litigation in the Global South
- Peter Pesic, Sounding Bodies: Music and the Making of Biomedical Science
- Luiz Pessoa, The Entangled Brain: How Perception, Cognition, and Emotion Are Woven Together
- Suzanne J. Piotrowski, Daniel Berliner and Alex Ingrams, The Power of Partnership in Open Government: Reconsidering Multistakeholder Governance Reform
- Joseph Polchinski, Memories of a Theoretical Physicist: A Journey across the Landscape of Strings , Black Holes, and the Multiverse
- Matthew Ratcliffe, Grief Worlds: A Study of Emotional Experience
- Hannah Star Rogers, Art, Science, and the Politics of Knowledge
- Daniel Rosiak, Sheaf Theory through Examples
- Simon Peter Rowberry, Four Shades of Gray: The Amazon Kindle Platform
- Bo Ruberg, Sex Dolls at Sea: Imagined Histories of Sexual Technologies
- Kenneth J. Saltman, The Alienation of Fact: Digital Educational Privatization, AI, and the False Promise of Bodies and Numbers
- Harmeet Sawhney and Hamid R. Ekbia, Universal Access and Its Asymmetries: The Untold Story of the Last 200 Years
- Edited by Ted R. Schultz, Richard Gawne and Peter N. Peregrine, The Convergent Evolution of Agriculture in Humans and Insects
- Edited by David L. Shrier and Alex Pentland, Global Fintech: Financial Innovation in the Connected World
- Johan Söderberg and Maxigas, Resistance to the Current: The Dialectics of Hacking
- Danielle Shlomit Sofer: Sex Sounds: Vectors of Difference in Electronic Music
- Janaki Srinivasan, The Political Lives of Information: Information and the Production of Development in India
- Robert W. Staiger, A World Trading System for the Twenty-First Century
- Josef Stern, Quotations as Pictures
- George Stiny, Shapes of Imagination: Calculating in Coleridge's Magical Realm
- Georg Striedter, Model Systems in Biology: History, Philosophy, and Practical Concerns
- Yixian Sun, Certifying China: The Rise and Limits of Transnational Sustainability Governance in Emerging Economies
- Peter Sutoris, Educating for the Anthropocene: Schooling and Activism in the Face of Slow Violence
- Dylan van der Schyff, Andrea Schiavio and David J. Elliott, Musical Bodies, Musical Minds: Enactive Cognitive Science and the Meaning of Human Musicality
- Deena Skolnick Weisberg and David M. Sobel, Constructing Science: Connecting Causal Reasoning to Scientific Thinking in Young Children
- Emily West, Buy Now: How Amazon Branded Convenience and Normalized Monopoly
- Michele White, Touch Screen Theory: Digital Devices and Feelings: Digital Devices and Feelings
- John Willinsky, Copyright's Broken Promise: How to Restore the Law’s Ability to Promote the Progress of Science
- Josephine Wolff, Cyberinsurance Policy: Rethinking Risk in an Age of Ransomware, Computer Fraud, Data Breaches, and Cyberattacks
- Lisa Zunshine, The Secret Life of Literature
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Established in 1962, the MIT Press is one of the largest and most distinguished university presses in the world and a leading publisher of books and journals at the intersection of science, technology, art, social science, and design. MIT Press publications are known for their intellectual daring, scholarly standards, interdisciplinary focus, and distinctive design.