In Search of Common Purpose | ALN

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-09-22

Summary:

Use the link to access the full text article from ALN Magazine. “Journals publish research and readers either buy a subscription or pay per view, but not for long. Open access—research available free to readers—is mandatory for NIH-funded projects in the US, and the UK’s long-awaited Finch Report advocates a timely move in that direction. Many universities worldwide with Open Access policies house open-access repositories, and the number is growing rapidly... there is agreement that unfettered access to research results would accelerate discovery, citation and economic growth by orders of magnitude. Those who decry the privatization of publicly-funded research want all research funded by a taxpayer anywhere to be freely available.  Globally 118 countries offer just under 8,000 open access journals with about 1,000 of those in life sciences and medicine and more in all categories posted daily. The Directory of Open Access books lists 28 publishers offering a total of 1,118 books and Project Gutenberg reports 36,000 open access books available as of 2011. OpenDOAR lists 2,169 open access repositories  worldwide; ROAR lists 2,910...  PLoS, the Public Library of Science, published the first peer-reviewed, open-access online journal in 2006. As open access gained momentum, what was tagged a fringe community caught the imagination of scientists, librarians, research managers, policy makers and not-for-profit funders around the world—and has upended a tradition many call anachronistic and counterproductive. ‘As librarians, we’ve made printed information as open as possible’, says Phil Sykes, University Librarian, University of Liverpool. ‘The most important labour of my generation is to bring about the same situation with regard to electronic information. This is especially important because the barriers—high subscription costs—mean small and medium size companies have limited access. Yet these are the people we count on to bring about economic regeneration in the next few years’. The growing presence of open access to scientific research raises a new set of sobering issues. Heading the list: [1] Funding the cost of high-quality open-access publishing [2] Ability to search for high-level information and summaries [3] Access to source data used in the research [4] Research information management [5] Peer review and prestige..."

Link:

http://www.alnmag.com/article/in-search-common-purpose

From feeds:

[IOI] Open Infrastructure Tracking Project » Items tagged with oa.eprints in Open Access Tracking Project (OATP)
Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.data oa.gold oa.business_models oa.publishers oa.comment oa.mandates oa.green oa.libraries oa.peer_review oa.interoperability oa.costs oa.books oa.librarians oa.funders oa.wellcome oa.floss oa.recommendations oa.doaj oa.finch_report oa.project_gutenberg oa.repositories oa.policies oa.journals oa.wellcome oa.usa oa.uk oa.standards oa.roar oa.repositories oa.recommendations oa.quality oa.publishers oa.project_gutenberg oa.prestige oa.policies oa.peer_review oa.nih oa.new oa.mandates oa.libraries oa.librarians oa.journals oa.interoperability oa.green oa.government oa.gold oa.funds oa.funders oa.formats oa.floss oa.finch_report oa.fees oa.eprints oa.embargoes oa.dspace oa.doaj oa.doab oa.data oa.cris oa.costs oa.comment oa.cerif oa.business_models oa.books oa.opendoar oa.doar

Date tagged:

09/22/2012, 11:11

Date published:

09/22/2012, 07:11