ALPSP University Press Rising Star Awards Winner, Sam Johnson, Assistant Commissioning Editor for Ancient History & Classical Studies, Law and Politics & International Relations, looks back at the Redux Conference.
The 2025 ALPSP University Press Redux Conference, held on April 3-4 at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, continued its tradition of fostering collaboration among university presses and society publishers. As we are pushed further into an era of geopolitical uncertainty, Academic Publishers and University Presses alike sought to focus not only on the challenges they face in a turbulent market such as the rise of AI and growing demand for Open Access, but how to capitalise on the opportunities available to us to weather the current storm. It was evident early on that the conference was keen to stimulate discussion on how best to tackle prominent issues and seize opportunities and the highly engaged attendees provided an excellent platform for this throughout.
Given the challenging landscape faced by Academic Publishers at present alongside Meta’s pillaging of content to train their new LLM, LibGen, it’s no surprise that the topic of AI was ever present and weaved its way through each panel. Chris Leonard (Cactus Communications) tackled this in the opening keynote speech to discuss recent developments and how AI can support rather harm Publishers. He proposed that in 2025 the industry is at the start of a new chapter that will shape how we work within the next five to ten years. Despite concerns in this constantly evolving space, his message is ultimately one of encouragement for Publishers, that it is not a question of how AI can serve Publishing, but how Publishing can serve the world with the help of AI which I would like to hope put plenty of attendees at ease about what’s to come in the near future.
Competing for the attention of Academic Publishers alongside AI is of course the question of Open Access (OA) and how to disperse content to the masses in a financially sustainable manner. To quote another delegate, “if I had the answer to this, I’d no doubt be a very rich man”. During multiple panels attendees questioned which were the best methods for Publishers to meet the growing demand for OA, but also tried to understand how much our approaches to OA vary. This included some strong advocates for the Subscribe to Open (S2O) model which is gaining greater traction among Humanities and Social Sciences Publishers in particular like with Edinburgh University Press’ growing S2O initiative.
One of the most intriguing takeaways from the conference came from Sarah Ogilvie’s (University of Oxford) keynote speech, “Where does Publishing Fit into the Research Cycle”. She suggests that if Academic Publishers were to reconsider their place within the research cycle, they could open up greater revenue streams from a single project rather than simply charging consumers to access the end product of a research project, i.e., a book or a journal article. Instead, by intervening at an earlier stage of the research cycle and acquiring the rights to license the core research like datasets or a corpus. This can then be licensed to companies and other researchers keen to utilise the data for their own purposes to create another valuable income stream at a time when the traditional publishing model is under strain.
In summary, the 2025 ALPSP Redux Conference stressed the importance for Academic Publishers to adapt and innovate in an evolving landscape through collaboration with colleagues at University Presses and Publishers. From assessing the complexities of AI to rethinking Open Access models and exploring how best to diversify our revenue streams for
a financially stable future, the conference served as a timely reminder that while the challenges are significant, so too are the opportunities. By embracing change and fostering collaboration, University Presses can not only endure but actively shape the future of scholarly publishing.
About the ALPSP Rising Star Award 2024
About the author
Sam Johnson is Assistant Commissioning Editor for Ancient History & Classical Studies, Law and Politics & International Relations.
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