Campus-based Open-access Publishing Funds: A Practical Guide to Design and Implementation | SPARC

peter.suber's bookmarks 2013-08-11

Summary:

"The decision to launch an Open-access Fund is a complex one for many reasons.  Establishing a clear understanding of your Fund’s goals, the policies that will govern it, how it will be administered, and what tools can be used to evaluate the Fund’s results all involve careful deliberation and discussion.  The relative novelty of the category, combined with demographic, philosophical, and political differences among the institutions that have established Open-access Funds to date combine to create an environment in which there are not yet transferable templates for the simple and straightforward creation of Funds.  As a result, it may be challenging for those contemplating the launch of an Open-access Fund to move ahead with absolute confidence and clarity.  And yet, despite this uncertainty, more than a dozen institutions (as of this writing) have launched Open-access Funds.  This is a concept that clearly intrigues some within the scholarly communication community.  As such, it bears further consideration and analysis. This guide is not an advocacy document promoting the launch of Open-access Funds.  Rather, it is predicated on an awareness that institutions are curious about these Funds.  They are seeking to better understand why Funds are being launched, what decisions go into their creation, and how they are being managed.  They would like to know what lessons have been learned by those institutions that have already created Open-access Funds.  SPARC believes that this guide can help educate those eager to learn more about Open-access Funds so that, should they choose to proceed, they can do so with their best foot forward.The guide will also inform the creation and management of Open-access Funds by those who intend to do so, using the input of universities who have already set down this path.  The recommendations that follow are drawn from interviews with Fund organizers and administrators from multiple universities across North America.  Any prescriptive elements are the result of consensus feedback from these key personnel, rather than formal SPARC recommendations. This document should be viewed within the context of a broader suite of SPARC materials on Open-access Funds...."

Link:

http://www.sparc.arl.org/resources/papers-guides/campus-oa-funds

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » peter.suber's bookmarks

Tags:

oa.gold oa.best_practices oa.sparc oa.funds oa.journals

Date tagged:

08/11/2013, 14:02

Date published:

08/11/2013, 10:02