Philippine journals on the Web
MINI CRITIQUE By Isagani Cruz 
Thursday, September 25, 2008 

Less than four months in existence, the Philippine Journals Online project has 
succeeded in dramatically increasing the readership of scholarly journals 
published in the Philippines.
 
This is clear from a report by the London-based International Network for the 
Availability of Scientific Publications (INASP), which is funding the initial 
year of the project in cooperation with a Canada-based computer server.
 
>From June 1 to August 31, the philjol.info website counted 20,695 downloads, 
>coming from 122 countries, of articles from Philippine journals. I do not have 
>the figures yet for all the journals on the site, but I have those for the 
>journals published by De La Salle University (DLSU).
 
The Journal of Research in Science, Computing and Engineering had 461 downloads.
The Asia-Pacific Social Science Review had 660 downloads.
The DLSU Business & Economics Review had 678 downloads.
The Asia Pacific Education Researcher had 917 downloads.
Ideya had 1,228 downloads.
Malay had 10,977 downloads.

All in all, the DLSU journals had 14,921 downloads.
 
There are some interesting observations that can be made from these statistics.
First, the DLSU journals account for 72.1% of all downloads from Philippine 
journals. (Allow me to boast a little bit about this, because I manage these 
journals.)
 
Second, since DLSU prints at most 600 hard copies of each journal, it is clear 
that web publication is a much cheaper and more effective way to reach scholars 
around the world. Even a journal displayed on a university library shelf 
(usually, only the current issue is displayed anyway) is much less visible than 
one on a website, where it is searchable by Google Scholar or even plain Google.
 
Third, Malay is published in Filipino. Its articles cover many fields of 
scholarship, including mathematics, the sciences, the social sciences, and the 
humanities. Since the number of downloads of Malay is more than half the number 
of total downloads of all Philippine journals, it is clear that Filipino is the 
scholarly language of choice of scholars around the world interested in the 
Philippines.
 
It cannot be said that it is our OFWs in 122 countries that are downloading 
Malay. The articles are heavy, academic stuff, many of them written in jargon 
comprehensible only to university researchers. Clearly, the OFW audience for 
these articles is minimal. Instead, readers of scholarly journals are usually 
university professors writing their own articles and looking for fresh data or 
new theories.
 
Fourth, the numbers of downloads and downloading countries are simply amazing. 
The Philippines is starting to attract scholarly attention.
 
Here are the 26 journals currently on the website: Asia-Pacific Social Science 
Review, Augustinian, Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture, DLSU Business & 
Economics Review, Emilio Aguinaldo College Research Bulletin, Far Eastern 
University Communication Journal, Far Eastern University English Language 
Journal, Hapag: A Journal of Interdisciplinary Theological Research, Ideya, 
Journal of Research in Science, Computing and Engineering, Kritika Kultura, 
Kritike: An Online Journal of Philosophy, Loyola Schools Review, Malay, 
Mindanao Law Journal, Philippine Computing Journal, Philippine Information 
Technology Journal, Philippine Journal of Neurology, Philippine Journal of 
Psychology, Philippine Journal of Public Administration, Philippine Population 
Review, Philippine Sociological Review, Philippine Studies, Tambara, The Asia 
Pacific Education Researcher, The Philippine Scientist.
 
Note that there are two ISI-listed journals on the website: The Asia Pacific 
Education Researcher (DLSU) and The Philippine Scientist (University of San 
Carlos). Being on the ISI list means being one of the most frequently cited 
journals in the world.
 
Other ISI-listed journals based in the Philippines (but still not on the 
website) are Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, Philippine Agricultural 
Scientist (UPLB), Philippine Entomologist (UPLB), Philippine Journal of Crop 
Science, Philippine Journal of Science (DOST), Philippine Journal of Veterinary 
Medicine (UPLB), Philippine Political Science Journal (UP Diliman), and Sabrao 
Journal of Breeding and Genetics. If the editors of these journals want to be 
on the website, they can visit philjol.info.
 
SOURCE: http://www.philstar.com/index.php


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