Elsevier Stops Hosting Arms Sales Fairs After Boycott

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Good news, everyone! It turns out that Reed Elsevier, the publisher and exhibitions group, has finally ended their involvement in the arms trade yesterday as the result of a two-year boycott by doctors, healthcare groups, authors and pacifist organizations.

Elsevier, which owns the medical journal The Lancet, had faced boycotts and continued protests for the past two years from authors, academics and medical professionals. Last year 13 authors, including Ian McEwan, A. S. Byatt and Nick Hornby, joined in by calling on the company to quit the arms trade market. Further, some investors have also pressured Elsevier about its arms exhibitions.

They observed that Elsevier's role in organising arms fairs was at cross-purposes with The Lancet's attempts to improve health.

"We have listened closely to these concerns and this has led us to conclude that the defence shows are no longer compatible with Reed Elsevier's position as a leading publisher of scientific, medical, legal and business content," said Sir Crispin Davis, chief executive.

Elsevier's biggest arms fair is the Defence Systems and Equipment International, which is held every two years at London's Excel arena. The group will still oversee the next show in September but will quit the defense exhibitions by the second half of the year.

Reed Elsevier said that its defense exhibitions comprised about 0.5 per cent of its turnover, or £20-£25 million. Medical and science publications, however, account for about 14 per cent, or close to £700 million.

Cited story.

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(via biocurious) I don't know if you remember the news item that Reed Elsevier, publisher of many scientific journals, was funding arms trade shows. It got to the point that the editorial board of the Lancet, which is owned by Elsevier, agreed with researchers who wanted to boycott their own…
I like the British medical journal, The Lancet. I like it a lot. I read it, subscribed to it and I've published there. More than once. So I sympathize with their terrible dilemma: Physicians from around the world urged the publisher of The Lancet medical journal to cut its links to weapons sales,…
Physicians from around the world urged Elsevier Group PLC., the publisher of The Lancet medical journal and other scientific and medical journals, to cut its links to weapons sales, calling on the editors to find another publisher if Reed Elsevier refused to stop hosting arms fairs. "The Lancet…
We need to celebrate our victories, small as some are. I learned from my SciBling, Grrl, over at Living the Scientific Life that Elsevier is abandoning their ill gotten gains as enablers of international arms merchants, a role we and many others posted on. Her summary is excellent. Here's some…

My first quick read was "the publisher and exhibitionists group"....

Excellent! It's nice to know that some folks actually pay attention to public/customer opinion!

By David Harmon (not verified) on 03 Jun 2007 #permalink