How the World Works

Why James Inhofe tried to sabotage open access

So why exactly did Oklahoma Republican, Senator James Inhofe, attempt to gut the open access provisions of a bill passed by the Senate last Monday? Could it be because his 11th biggest financial contributor over the past five years was Reed-Elsevier, one of the largest for-profit publishers of scientific research in the world?

Peter Suber's Open Access news passes on that tidbit from Charles Bailey's Digital Koans. How the World Works took particular interest in it, not only because it ties up Inhofe's motivations with a tidy little bought-and-paid-for bow, but because earlier this week readers were arguing over whether the science publishing industry had any money to lobby politicians with.

According to OpenSecrets.org, Reed-Elsevier spent a total of $3,380,000 on lobbying expenses in the United States in 2006.

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Is the Obama economic rescue plan a failure?
Swayed by GOP attacks, independent voters are abandoning ship. But the summer of stimulus love has hardly started
Are automaker woes skewing unemployment figures?
In the summer, the Big 3 usually idle factories and lay off workers. But this year, they're ahead of schedule
The Pope's liberal Christian values
Social justice, wealth redistribution, a new morality for Wall Street -- the pontiff throws down on capitalism

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