Reed
Elsevier to stop hosting arms exhibitions
Nayanah Siva
London
Reed Elsevier,
the global publisher that owns the Lancet, has announced that it will
no longer take part in organising arms fairs.
For more
than three years Reed Elsevier has owned the company Spearhead Exhibitions,
which has hosted some of the largest international defence exhibitions.
This connection has angered some members of the medical and scientific
community.
Sir Crispin
Davis, chief executive officer of the company, said last week, "Our
defence shows are quality businesses which have performed well in recent
years. None the less, it has become increasingly clear that growing
numbers of important customers and authors have very real concerns about
our involvement in the defence exhibitions business.
"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."
Reed Elsevier's
involvement has been severely criticised by numerous journals, even
including its own Lancet. Staff at the journal, which was founded in
1823, were unaware of their owner's connection with the arms trade until
2005, when they expressed their concerns in an editorial (Lancet 2005;366:868,
doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(05)67292-3).
"We
reject completely any perceived connection between the journal and the
arms trade, no matter how tangential it might be . . . We respectfully
ask Reed Elsevier to divest itself of all business interests that threaten
human, and especially civilian, health and well being," the editorial
said.
An editorial
in the BMJ in March called for medical societies to look elsewhere for
publishers, for journal editors to express their disgust, and for researchers
to refuse to submit their high profile randomised controlled trials
to Reed Elsevier (BMJ 2007;334:547-8, 17 March, doi:10.1136/bmj.39153.580023.80)
More opposition
to Elsevier's participation in arms exhibitions was expressed in a letter
to the Times newspaper in March signed by several literary authors,
including Ian McEwan, Will Self, and Nick Hornby. "We call upon
Reed Elsevier to end its involvement in a dirty and damaging business,"
the letter said (www.timesonline.co.uk, 1 Mar, "The London book
fair, democracy in action, shoot first").
Peter Hall,
chairman of Doctors for Human Rights, criticised Reed Elsevier for refusing
to take any action earlier, in the face of two years' criticism and
despite the fact that Spearhead Exhibitions accounted for only 0.5%
of the group's turnover.
"Reed
Elsevier stubbornly held onto a blinkered perspective that the promotion
of the arms industry was a profitable venture," Dr Hall told the
BMJ.
"Reed
Elsevier's change in policy is not only a triumph for those who participated
in the campaign to persuade Reed Elsevier of its error in promoting
arms trade but also for the integrity of the medical and scientific
world."