Groundbreaking deal makes large number of German studies free to public | Science | AAAS

peter.suber's bookmarks 2019-01-16

Summary:

"Three years ago, a group of German libraries, universities, and research institutes teamed up to force the three largest scientific publishers to offer an entirely new type of contract. In exchange for an annual lump sum, they wanted a nationwide agreement making papers by German authors free to read around the world, while giving researchers in Germany access to all of the publishers’ online content.

Today, after almost 3 years of negotiations, the consortium, named Project DEAL, can finally claim a success: This morning, it signed a deal with Wiley, an academic publisher headquartered in Hoboken, New Jersey.

Under the 3-year contract, scientists at more than 700 academic institutions will be able to access all of Wiley’s academic journals back to 1997 and to publish open access in all of Wiley’s journals. The annual fee will be based on the number of papers they publish in Wiley journals—about 10,000 in previous years, says one of the negotiators, physicist Gerard Meijer of the Fritz Haber Institute, a Max Planck Society institute here....

The deal will likely turn up the pressure on Elsevier and Springer, the other two publishers Project DEAL has been negotiating with...."

Link:

http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/01/groundbreaking-deal-makes-large-number-german-studies-free-public

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.offsets oa.wiley oa.hybrid oa.projekt_deal oa.germany oa.conversions oa.agreements

Date tagged:

01/16/2019, 17:01

Date published:

01/16/2019, 12:01