Growing SA Open Access adoption - But lacking mandatory policies prompts a call to activism.: Emerging Researchers

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-11-20

Summary:

"Ten South African universities, the Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf) and the Library and Information Association of South Africa (LIASA) were among the signatories of the Berlin Open Access Declaration who received certificates at the yearly Berlin Open Access (OA) Conference hosted by the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) at the University of Stellenbosch (SU) from 06 to 08 November 2012.   All Berlin Open Access Declaration signatories commit themselves to the dissemination of knowledge and research outputs by making them widely and readily available to society. This includes utilising new technologies to facilitate distribution and removing financing barriers to increase access.   Minister Derek Hanekom, Minister of Science and Technology gave an address at the conference gala dinner, highlighting the massive benefits to be gained from Open Access, especially from an African perspective.   'The adoption of open-access principles, which can help to remove these financial barriers to access to information, is one of the most progressive ways of growing and showcasing African research,' said the Minister, pledging government support for the Open Access movement.   Minister Hanekom also noted that academic libraries, especially those in Africa, have limited access to critical research information. This stifles the growth of African research and its capacity to find solutions to the plethora of problems confronting the continent. Access barriers sometimes even result in critical, relevant knowledge and research outputs generated in Africa being published in journals overseas - journals that are not affordable to African academic libraries. This means that Africa is in fact deprived of its own knowledge production, relegating the continent to the status of silent and invisible contributor to research output... Closer to home, the conspicuous absence from the signatory list of Historically Disadvantaged Institutions (HDIs) is a cause for concern. Given the resource challenges faced by HDIs, these institutions stand to gain the most from joining the Open Access movement.

   One of the stronger themes to emerge from the conference was the 'Call to Activism', led by Professor Adam Habib, Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Johannesburg. Professor Habib made a passionate plea for South Africa's tertiary institutions to work together and maximise their combined library budgets so as to have more buying power. He also called for radical action to counter the monopoly of academic publishing houses that made huge profits through public funded research. Professor Habib called for activism within the academic research environment saying that it was time for pushing boundaries to ensure that Open Access becomes a reality within the South African tertiary institution environment.  The partnership imperative was echoed by several other presenters who shared experiences from their respective countries. Many identified the lack of partnerships as one of the main barriers to Open Access adoption. The main lesson to be learned from Northern Hemisphere countries where OA has made significant progress include: [1] Inter-institutional partnerships towards the pooling of financial and technical resources; [2] Governmental support towards ensuring that publicly funded research are available through Open Access platforms; [3] Inter-disciplinary collaboration between custodians of content (such as librarians and curators) and software professionals (developers and architects) towards the development and maintenance of openly accessible and compatible platforms. Signing the Berlin Open Access Declaration is an important, but not the sole, step in committing an organisation to a culture where information is made widely and readily available to society. This commitment has to find practical application in the creation of actual platforms where the information can be accessed. Two popular platforms for achieving this are through Open Access journals and Open Access repositories. In this regard a number of South African institutions, some of which have not signed the Berlin Open Access Declaration, are maintaining Open Access repositories. At the time of writing this article, the Directory of Open Access Repositories (DOAR) listed 24 South African repositories. Even more encouraging are the 54 South African Open Access journals registered with theDirectory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ).  Another indicator of Open Access proliferation is the adoption of Mandatory Archiving Policies (MAP). MAP requires researchers/grant recipients to provide open acess to their peer-reviewed research article output by depositing it in an open access repository. Registry of Open Access Repositories M

Link:

http://ern.nrf.ac.za/control/ViewFeatureArticle?contentId=14361&featureContentId=14361&articleType=mainFeature

From feeds:

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

Tags:

oa.new oa.gold oa.comment oa.mandates oa.green oa.advocacy oa.libraries oa.events oa.ir oa.librarians oa.africa oa.doaj oa.budgets oa.consortia oa.south_africa oa.roarmap oa.stellenbosch.u oa.b10 oa.repositories oa.policies oa.journals oa.south oa.opendoar

Date tagged:

11/20/2012, 14:52

Date published:

11/20/2012, 09:52