In our August "how can we help you?" thread, Mercado writes:
A journal recently accepted a manuscript of mine. That is, it is forthcoming in journal x. Is it bad form to post a version of the paper on my professional website before the journal publishes the manuscript?
A reader then replied:
Mercado I think it is bad form. Read the contract you signed with the publisher, and then honor it.
This strikes me as a strange reply. It is of course vital to respect the terms of a publishing contract. However, my sense is that most (though not all) journals allow preprints to be posted on an author's website and/or repository upon acceptance.
As you can see on my webpage, I have links to all of my papers on PhilPapers, and I have deposited preprints of nearly all of my papers there, usually immediately upon journal acceptance (though sometimes after publisher-mandated embargoes). One of the great things about PhilPapers is that when you go to upload a paper, it has a function that enables you to double-check the archiving policy of the journal your paper is coming out in. Usually, journals require that you upload either an accepted version of the paper (prior to typesetting), or alternatively, a version of the paper prior to peer-review–so you should definitely know which (if either) is okay with the journal in question. However, aside from being careful in these ways, I don't see anything at all problematic about the practice. On the contrary, as long as the journal permits it, it seems to me like it's in both the author's and the journal's interest to post preprints. The more a paper gets read, cited, and engaged with, the better!
But these are just my thoughts. What are yours?
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