"Understanding and Making Use of Academic Authors’ Open Access Rights" by David Hansen

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-10-01

Summary:

Use the link to access the full text article from the open access Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication published by Pacific University LIbrary.  The abstract reads as follows: "Authors of academic works do not take full advantage of the self-archiving rights that they retain in their publications, though research shows that many academic authors are well-aligned (at least in principle) with open access (OA) principles. This article explains how institutionally-assisted self-archiving in open access repositories can effectively take advantage of retained rights and highlights at least one method of facilitating this process through automated means. METHODS To understand the scope of author-retained rights (including the right to purchase hybrid or other open access options) at some sample universities, author-rights data through the SHERPA/RoMEO API was combined with individual article citations (from Thomson Reuters' Web of Science) for works published over a one-year period (2011) and authored by individuals affiliated with five major U.S. research universities. RESULTSAuthors retain significant rights in the articles that they create. Of the 29,322 unique articles authored over the one year period at the five universities, 28.83 percent could be archived in final PDF form and 87.95 percent could be archived as the post-print version. Nearly 43.47 percent also provided authors the choice of purchasing a hybrid paid open access option. DISCUSSION A significant percentage of current published output could be archived with little or no author intervention. With prior approval through an open access policy or otherwise, article manuscripts or final PDFs can be obtained and archived by library staff, and hybrid paid-OA options could be negotiated and exploited by library administrators. CONCLUSION Although mandates, legislation, and other policy tools may be useful to promote open access, many institutions already have the ability to increase the percentage of accessible works by taking advantage of retained author rights and hybrid OA options."

Link:

http://jlsc-pub.org/jlsc/vol1/iss2/6/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.gold oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.licensing oa.mandates oa.green oa.copyright oa.libraries oa.ir oa.librarians oa.hybrid oa.studies oa.thomson_reuters oa.sherpa.romeo oa.versions oa.new oa.repositories oa.libre oa.policies oa.journals

Date tagged:

10/01/2012, 12:56

Date published:

10/01/2012, 08:56