Enregistré dans:
Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: John, Ristuben
Format: Recurso digital
Langue:anglais
Publié: Zenodo 2026
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19748751
Tags: Ajouter un tag
Pas de tags, Soyez le premier à ajouter un tag!
_version_ 1866901653724069888
author John, Ristuben
author_facet John, Ristuben
contents <p> In January 2026, an independent researcher submitted a formal critique to arXiv Support raising<br>  structural disparate impact concerns regarding arXiv's endorsement requirement for first-time<br>  submitters. The critique included six specific governance questions and a constructive proposal for a<br>  frozen-or-provisional submission pathway with internal review authority.</p> <p>  arXiv's response did not engage with the substantive content of the critique. Following an explicit<br>  disclosure of disability and a direct request for accommodation, arXiv stated that "we cannot make<br>  exceptions" and confirmed in writing that arXiv does not maintain endorser infrastructure ("We do not<br>  maintain a list of potential endorsers other than what is provided on the arXiv site"). The ticket was<br>   closed without engaging in the interactive accommodation process required of federally funded<br>  entities under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.</p> <p>  This document preserves the verbatim exchange (five turns, January 11–16, 2026) for evidentiary,<br>  archival, and research purposes. arXiv is operated by Cornell University, which receives federal<br>  funding; Section 504 applies. The pattern documented — neutral policy producing disproportionate harm<br>  to a protected class, combined with explicit refusal to engage in interactive accommodation process<br>  when notified — corresponds to the disparate impact doctrine in U.S. disability law.</p> <p>  This document is published openly under CC BY 4.0 for citation by other researchers facing the same<br>  barrier, by disability rights organizations, and by policy analysts examining accessibility in<br>  academic publishing infrastructure.<br><br>A constructive accommodation proposal (frozen-or-provisional submission pathway with internal review<br>  authority) was offered in the original January 11, 2026 letter. arXiv did not respond to this<br>  proposal. The proposal is reproduced verbatim in the archived exchange.</p>
format Recurso digital
id zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_19748751
institution Zenodo
language eng
publishDate 2026
publisher Zenodo
record_format zenodo
spellingShingle Open Letter: Structural Disparate Impact in arXiv's Endorsement System (with documented support exchange, January 2026)
John, Ristuben
arxiv
endorsement
disparate impact
Section 504
Rehabilitation Act
ADA
disability
accessibility
academic publishing
open access
Cornell University
gatekeeping
structural exclusion
governance
neurodivergence
<p> In January 2026, an independent researcher submitted a formal critique to arXiv Support raising<br>  structural disparate impact concerns regarding arXiv's endorsement requirement for first-time<br>  submitters. The critique included six specific governance questions and a constructive proposal for a<br>  frozen-or-provisional submission pathway with internal review authority.</p> <p>  arXiv's response did not engage with the substantive content of the critique. Following an explicit<br>  disclosure of disability and a direct request for accommodation, arXiv stated that "we cannot make<br>  exceptions" and confirmed in writing that arXiv does not maintain endorser infrastructure ("We do not<br>  maintain a list of potential endorsers other than what is provided on the arXiv site"). The ticket was<br>   closed without engaging in the interactive accommodation process required of federally funded<br>  entities under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973.</p> <p>  This document preserves the verbatim exchange (five turns, January 11–16, 2026) for evidentiary,<br>  archival, and research purposes. arXiv is operated by Cornell University, which receives federal<br>  funding; Section 504 applies. The pattern documented — neutral policy producing disproportionate harm<br>  to a protected class, combined with explicit refusal to engage in interactive accommodation process<br>  when notified — corresponds to the disparate impact doctrine in U.S. disability law.</p> <p>  This document is published openly under CC BY 4.0 for citation by other researchers facing the same<br>  barrier, by disability rights organizations, and by policy analysts examining accessibility in<br>  academic publishing infrastructure.<br><br>A constructive accommodation proposal (frozen-or-provisional submission pathway with internal review<br>  authority) was offered in the original January 11, 2026 letter. arXiv did not respond to this<br>  proposal. The proposal is reproduced verbatim in the archived exchange.</p>
title Open Letter: Structural Disparate Impact in arXiv's Endorsement System (with documented support exchange, January 2026)
topic arxiv
endorsement
disparate impact
Section 504
Rehabilitation Act
ADA
disability
accessibility
academic publishing
open access
Cornell University
gatekeeping
structural exclusion
governance
neurodivergence
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19748751