the Daily Bruin: Proposal under review would make UC scholarly work free and open to the public

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-10-13

Summary:

Scholarly work produced within the University of California may become free and available to the public as early as 2013, if a new policy is adopted. The open access policy, which is currently being reviewed by Academic Senates at UC campuses, would allow anyone to view or download research publications by UC faculty without having to pay subscription fees to academic publishers...  If approved, the open access policy would require UC faculty to provide a digital copy of all future published work to be included in a free online repository housed at the UC’s California Digital Library – before giving the work’s copyrights to the publisher. '(The proposal) is potentially an argument in favor of distributing economic growth, education and public discourse,' Kelty said. 'This policy that’s being considered is just one step toward changing the scholarly publishing system.'  UC San Francisco is currently the only UC campus with a similar policy, which was adopted in May. About 140 other universities, including Princeton University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, already have open access policies, Kelty said.  For some academic journals – many of which are owned by a few large publishing companies – individuals and libraries must pay a yearly subscription rate to access their content, or purchase articles individually, Kelty said.  Annual subscriptions for a single journal can cost libraries anywhere from a couple hundred dollars to more than $30,000, according to academic publisher websites. This creates a problem especially for libraries with shrinking budgets, Kelty said.  Some academic journals are already free to the public, sometimes at an extra cost to the author. Other research entities – such as the National Institutes of Health, which requires all research funded by its grants to be available and free online – mandate public access.  Some academics, however, have raised concerns about the possible economic ramifications of the proposed open access policy on smaller journals not owned by large academic publishers.  Robert Fovell, a professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at UCLA, said small and non-profit journals, where he publishes some of his work, may be harmed financially if individuals and libraries can access scholarly content elsewhere without having to pay subscription fees.  Despite the concerns, Fovell said he is largely in favor of the idea of open access.

Pablo Sierra, a history graduate student, also said he was concerned some journals would not survive under the new policy; for instance, the American Society for Ethnohistory’s journal, a relatively small journal that has published his work before. '(The journal is) not a rich institution, but it publishes very important research,' Sierra said.  Scholars can opt out of the proposed policy if journals reserve exclusive rights to their work, Kelty said... The UCLA Library will hold panel discussions with faculty and administrators as well as other events toward the end of the month to educate students about the open access proposal – part of a larger international movement to promote free availability of scholarly research, said Sharon Farb, associate university librarian."

Link:

http://www.dailybruin.com/m/article/2012/10/a-new-proposal-under-review-would-make-uc-scholarly-work-free-and-open-to-the-public

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.comment oa.ssh oa.mandates oa.green oa.societies oa.libraries oa.costs oa.sustainability oa.librarians oa.prices oa.u.california oa.ucsf oa.repositories oa.economics_of oa.universities oa.hei oa.policies oa.policies.universities oa.uc.cdl

Date tagged:

10/13/2012, 10:26

Date published:

10/13/2012, 06:26