Open Access Manifesto

Open access is the practice of making research and other materials freely available online, ideally under licenses that permit widespread dissemination. Open access publishing plays a huge role in the spread of knowledge, culture, and ideas.

Celebrating Open Access, https://supporters.eff.org/civicrm/mailing/view?reset=1&id=1231 https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/10/open-access-week-2015">Open Access Week 2015, https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2015/10/open-access-week-2015

Open Access The open access movement is a long-standing campaign to make scholarly works both freely available and reusable. One of its fundamental premises is that the progress of knowledge and culture happens when scholarly works of all kinds are widely shared, rather than hidden in ivory towers built with paywalls and buttressed by harsh legal regimes. That is why open access has two primary goals: Making research available online to the public, free of cost. This could be through an online repository hosted by a university, agency, or private entity; or through an open access journal. Making sure research is reusable by publishing it under an open licensing scheme. This allows for works not only to be read, but also to be analyzed and built upon for downstream innovation and the pursuit of knowledge. https://www.eff.org/issues/open-access

Open Access Book

Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions.

, Peter Suber, "Open Access Overview," 2004 (revised 2010)
Why Open Access is Better for Scholarly Societies doaj-directory-of-open-access-journals-logotype-100x30.png" alt="" /> eifl-knowledge-without-boundaries-logotype-twitter.png" alt="" /> OA Journals aka Gold OA OA Repositories aka Green OA OA repositories can be organized by discipline, like arXiv for physics, or institution, like Harvard's DASH. Peter Suber's OA Writings foas Foundation for Open Access Statistics - promoting free software, open access publishing, and reproducible research in statistics. Federal Research Public Access Act lsa Open Access Symposium Support pro-open-access legislation such as the Federal Research Public Access Act. At the least, scholarly societies should disavow anti-open-access statements made on their behalf by publishing consortia, as the MLA did in its statement opposing the Research Works Act Leverage the society’s membership to push for open-access underwriting by funding agencies and by universities such as envisioned by the Compact for Open-Access Publishing Equity.

As the primary research funders in the humanities and social sciences, in linguistics in particular, the universities that employ us should be on the hook to disseminate the research results that their researchers generate.

"Why Open Access is Better for Scholarly Societies", http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/pamphlet/2013/01/29/why-open-access-is-better-for-scholarly-societies/

The above quote describes the principle behind the effort called the Compact for Open-Access Publishing Equity

Community

Confederation of Open Access Repositories">coar (Confederation of Open Access Repositories)

Greater visibility and application of research through global networks of Open Access repositories.

Community Blogroll

"https://openreflections.wordpress.com/", "Open Reflections" https://www.coar-repositories.org/feed/ COAR Repositories Feed "https://openreflections.wordpress.com/feed/", "Open Reflections Feed"

'Free Access' Is Not 'Open Access'

Budapest Open Access Initiative

Budapest Open Access Initiative is a manifesto decrying peer-reviewed Resulted after an Open Society Foundations meetup celebrating their tenth anniversary eLanguage serves as a hosting service and aggregator for a range of Open Access publications in linguistics.

Ten Years On, Researchers Embrace Open Access

Budapest Open Access Initiative

An old tradition and a new technology have converged to make possible an unprecedented public good. The old tradition is the willingness of scientists and scholars to publish the fruits of their research in scholarly journals without payment, for the sake of inquiry and knowledge. The new technology is the internet. The public good they make possible is the world-wide electronic distribution of the peer-reviewed journal literature and completely free and unrestricted access to it by all scientists, scholars, teachers, students, and other curious minds. Removing access barriers to this literature will accelerate research, enrich education, share the learning of the rich with the poor and the poor with the rich, make this literature as useful as it can be, and lay the foundation for uniting humanity in a common intellectual conversation and quest for knowledge.

For various reasons, this kind of free and unrestricted online availability, which we will call open access, has so far been limited to small portions of the journal literature. But even in these limited collections, many different initiatives have shown that open access is economically feasible, that it gives readers extraordinary power to find and make use of relevant literature, and that it gives authors and their works vast and measurable new visibility, readership, and impact. To secure these benefits for all, we call on all interested institutions and individuals to help open up access to the rest of this literature and remove the barriers, especially the price barriers, that stand in the way. The more who join the effort to advance this cause, the sooner we will all enjoy the benefits of open access.

The literature that should be freely accessible online is that which scholars give to the world without expectation of payment. Primarily, this category encompasses their peer-reviewed journal articles, but it also includes any unreviewed preprints that they might wish to put online for comment or to alert colleagues to important research findings. There are many degrees and kinds of wider and easier access to this literature. By "open access" to this literature, we mean its free availability on the public internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to the internet itself. The only constraint on reproduction and distribution, and the only role for copyright in this domain, should be to give authors control over the integrity of their work and the right to be properly acknowledged and cited.

While the peer-reviewed journal literature should be accessible online without cost to readers, it is not costless to produce. However, experiments show that the overall costs of providing open access to this literature are far lower than the costs of traditional forms of dissemination. With such an opportunity to save money and expand the scope of dissemination at the same time, there is today a strong incentive for professional associations, universities, libraries, foundations, and others to embrace open access as a means of advancing their missions. Achieving open access will require new cost recovery models and financing mechanisms, but the significantly lower overall cost of dissemination is a reason to be confident that the goal is attainable and not merely preferable or utopian.

To achieve open access to scholarly journal literature, we recommend two complementary strategies.

  1. Self-Archiving: First, scholars need the tools and assistance to deposit their refereed journal articles in open electronic archives, a practice commonly called, self-archiving. When these archives conform to standards created by the Open Archives Initiative, then search engines and other tools can treat the separate archives as one. Users then need not know which archives exist or where they are located in order to find and make use of their contents.
  2. Open-Access Journals: Second, scholars need the means to launch a new generation of journals committed to open access, and to help existing journals that elect to make the transition to open access. Because journal articles should be disseminated as widely as possible, these new journals will no longer invoke copyright to restrict access to and use of the material they publish. Instead they will use copyright and other tools to ensure permanent open access to all the articles they publish. Because price is a barrier to access, these new journals will not charge subscription or access fees, and will turn to other methods for covering their expenses. There are many alternative sources of funds for this purpose, including the foundations and governments that fund research, the universities and laboratories that employ researchers, endowments set up by discipline or institution, friends of the cause of open access, profits from the sale of add-ons to the basic texts, funds freed up by the demise or cancellation of journals charging traditional subscription or access fees, or even contributions from the researchers themselves. There is no need to favor one of these solutions over the others for all disciplines or nations, and no need to stop looking for other, creative alternatives

Open access to peer-reviewed journal literature is the goal. Self-archiving (I.) and a new generation of open-access journals (II.) are the ways to attain this goal. They are not only direct and effective means to this end, they are within the reach of scholars themselves, immediately, and need not wait on changes brought about by markets or legislation. While we endorse the two strategies just outlined, we also encourage experimentation with further ways to make the transition from the present methods of dissemination to open access. Flexibility, experimentation, and adaptation to local circumstances are the best ways to assure that progress in diverse settings will be rapid, secure, and long-lived.

The Open Society Institute, the foundation network founded by philanthropist George Soros, is committed to providing initial help and funding to realize this goal. It will use its resources and influence to extend and promote institutional self-archiving, to launch new open-access journals, and to help an open-access journal system become economically self-sustaining. While the Open Society Institute's commitment and resources are substantial, this initiative is very much in need of other organizations to lend their effort and resources.

We invite governments, universities, libraries, journal editors, publishers, foundations, learned societies, professional associations, and individual scholars who share our vision to join us in the task of removing the barriers to open access and building a future in which research and education in every part of the world are that much more free to flourish.

Budapest, Hungary

  1. Leslie Chan: Bioline International Darius Cuplinskas: Director, Information Program, Open Society Institute Michael Eisen: Public Library of Science Fred Friend: Director Scholarly Communication, University College London Yana Genova: Next Page Foundation Jean-Claude Guédon: University of Montreal Melissa Hagemann: Program Officer, Information Program, Open Society Institute Stevan Harnad: Professor of Cognitive Science, University of Southampton, Universite du Quebec a Montreal Rick Johnson: Director, Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (sparc) Rima Kupryte: Open Society Institute Manfredi La Manna: Electronic Society for Social Scientists István Rév: Open Society Institute, Open Society Archives Monika Segbert: eIFL Project consultant Sidnei de Souza: Informatics Director at CRIA, Bioline International Peter Suber: Professor of Philosophy, Earlham College & The Free Online Scholarship Newsletter Jan Velterop: Publisher, BioMed Central

What Is “Open Access”?

Open Access List

The Inevitability of Open Access Signalling oa-ness

The jors (Journal of Open Research Software)

jors features peer reviewed software papers describing research software with high reuse potential. We are working with a number of specialist and institutional repositories to ensure that the associated software is professionally archived, preserved, and is openly available. Equally importantly, the software and the papers are citable, and reuse is tracked.

OA Dump

Intro to Open Access Video Search archive.org's Records for Open Access

Open access is a recent movement started by scientists and researchers with the goal of making scientifc results free, immediate, and available to the public. Open access truly expands shared knowledge across scientific fields — it is the best path for accelerating multi-disciplinary breakthroughs in research. via experiment.com

oa Button

Every day people around the world such as doctors, scientists, students and patients are denied access to the research they need. With the power of the internet, the results of academic research should be available to all. It’s time to showcase the impact of paywalls and help people get the research they need. That’s where Open oa Button comes in.

The oa Button is a browser bookmarklet that allows people to report when they hit a paywall and cannot access a research article. Navigate to oa Button and register for your very own oa Button and start using it.

Open Access Button Blog doubles as the home of the oa Button Project. You can read about the project from the very beginning, learn more about our team, and engage in shaping the future for oa Button.

About the oa Button Open Access ^#124; Open ubc

Open access is a growing international movement that uses online technologies to throw open the locked doors that once hid knowledge. Open access projects at UBC are embracing and encouraging unrestricted access to research and scholarly publishing.

Dump 02

What Is "Open Access"? Open Access Explained! Open Access is an alternative publishing and distribution model that makes scholarly research literature— most of which is already funded by taxpayers around the world—freely available to the public online, without restrictions.

Open Access harnesses the power of the internet, bringing the results of academic research to unprecedented numbers of scientists, university professors, medical researchers, patients, inventors, students, and others.

How did the open access movement begin?

Concentrated, collaborative, international work on the Open Access Model accelerated significantly after December 2001, when an Open Society Foundations–sponsored meeting in Budapest developed a statement of principles on Open Access to research literature. This statement, the Budapest Open Access Initiative, called for radical change to an $8-billion industry by creating new Open Access journals and urging researchers to report the results of their work in institutional archives. Many scholars regarded the statement with skepticism, and some academic publishers expressed ridicule.

However, two subsequent initiatives—the Bethesda Statement from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and the Berlin Declaration, which originated from the Max Planck Society—broadened and strengthened the base of support for open access. Communities of library administrators and scholarly researchers have organized their members and driven the effort to build momentum for implementing the Open Access Model.

Who’s using Open Access now?

About 30 percent of peer-reviewed articles today are open access.  Nearly 10,000 academic journals are accessible in the Directory of Open Access Journals, and more than 2,500 archives are included in the Directory of Open Access Repositories.

The Wellcome Trust in the United Kingdom was the world’s first funder to mandate open access for publication of the research it funds. More than 300 institutions followed suit, including the largest funder of research in the world, the National Institutes of Health in the United States.

Many of Harvard University’s schools have adopted Open Access mandates. One of the market leaders in scholarly journal publishing, Springer, vindicated the model in 2008, when it acquired open access publisher BioMed Central.

In 2013, the Obama Administration issued an executive directive instructing the largest u.s. funding agencies to provide public access to federally supported research. 

What’s next for the Open Access Movement?

In 2012, participants at a 10th-anniversary meeting of the Budapest Open Access Initiative developed a new set of recommendations for making Open Access the default method for distributing peer-reviewed research in every field and country by 2022. The recommendations address issues such as:

  • ensuring sustainability;
  • increasing support for Open Access in developing countries;
  • developing new opportunities for measuring the impact of research.

What are the Open Society Foundations doing to advance Open Access?

The Open Society Foundations support the organizations spearheading the development of Open Access policies globally, including sparc (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition) North America, sparc Europe, eifl (Electronic Information for Libraries), and the student-led Right to Research Coalition. These grantees have championed the development of open access policies in North America, Europe, and over 45 developing and transition countries.

The Lyon Declaration - On Access to Information and Development

Compact for oa Publishing Equity - cope)

The Compact for Open-Access Publishing Equity supports equity of the business models by committing each university to "the timely establishment of durable mechanisms for underwriting reasonable publication charges for articles written by its faculty and published in fee-based open-access journals and for which other institutions would not be expected to provide funds."

"Equity for Open-Access Journal Publishing" published in the open-access journal Public Library of Science Building.

Additional universities are encouraged to sign on to the compact from here.

pacer

Webpacer Down the Memory Hole - pacerD Deleted Decade of Court Records 25 Years Later, pacer Electronic Filing Continues to Change Courts

Open Access

Open access (oa) means unrestricted access via the Internet to peer-reviewed scholarly research. The primary content for oa was originally intended is scholarly journal articles, however it is branching out to provide coverage for theses, book chapters, and scholarly monographs.

Two Degress of Open Access

  1. gratis oa: which is free online access
  2. libre oa: which is free online access plus some additional usage rights.*
    1. *: These additional usage rights are often granted through the use of various specific Creative Commons licenses.

      Open Access Mandate

      An open access mandate is a policy adopted by a research institiute, research funder, or goverment which requires researchers (commonly university faculty or research staff and/or research grant recipients) to make their published, peer-reviewed journal articles and conference papers open accessible (1) by self-archiving their final, peer-reviewd drafts in a freely accessible institutional repository or disciplinary repository (aka Green oa) or (2) by publishing them in an open access journal (aka Gold oa).

      Open Access and Open Science Research

      Total numbers and shares of Open Access Journals using Creative Commons Licenses as listed by the Directory of Open Access Journals.

      ZENODO

      ZENODO builds and operate a simple and innovative service that enables researchers, scientists, EU projects and institutions to share and showcase multidisciplinary research results(data and publications) that are not part of the existing institutional or subject-based repositories of the research communities.

      ZENODO enables researchers, scientists, EU projects and institutions to:

      • easily share the long tail of small research results in a wide variety of formats including text, spreadsheets, audio, video, and images across all fields of science.
      • display their research results and get credited by making the research results citable and integrate them into existing reporting lines to funding agencies like the European Commission.
      • easily access and reuse shared research results.

      References and Resources

      Open Access in the Americas vid Altmetrics and open access: a measure of public interest Open Access Policy for FWF-funded Projects Essential Sources: Declarations Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities: Open Access Publishing Directory for Open Access Journals: Open Access Book Publisher: Licensing OASPA Standards: OAPEN-UK: Guide to Creative Commons for Humanities and Social Science Monograph Authors, Open Research Data Registry of Research Data Repositories: Royal Society Report: Science as an open enterprise. Open data for open science: (.pdf) Open Access News FWF News: FWF Twitter: Open Access Australian Open Access Support Group Open Access Articles ib Open Access and PLOS: The Future of Scholarly Publishing (slideshare) The Directory of Open Access Repositories - OpenDOAR IST Open Access Austria

      eCollection: Open Access Perspectives in the Humanities and Social Sciences

      open access - a list to discuss issues surrounding true open access Open Access Button aka Bookmarklet Open Access Button Open Data Network DOAJ - Directory of Open Access Journals List of Open Access Journals Public Library of Science Google Scholar The Availability of Open Data and New Trends in Data Visualisation Will Transfer How We Understand Our Cities Academics: Ask not what Open Access can do for you, but what you can do for your Disciplines Four Critiques of Open Data Initiatives Open Access Posts on lse Blog Participant Confidentiality and Open Access to Research Data Join WikiProject Open Access The Right to Open Access to Humanities and Social Science Research The Right to Open Access to Humanities
      • okf open access list
      • You can share your stories on difficulties or success with accessing information on the website WhoNeedsAccess
      • You can download the OpenAccessButton and start registering where you hit paywalls when trying to access information
      WikiProject Open WikiProject Open Access/Signalling oa-ness WikiProject Open Access
    2. Open Access Materials
    3. @ccess (Open Access Working Group) - Sharing the results of scientific research

      Open Access Taylor & Francis Online>

      Cogent OA - A New Open Access Publisher that puts Author Interests at the Heart of Everything we do Open Access Now is a team-managed, one stop source for news, policy and current writing about open access and scholarly communication. The purpose of this publication is to centralize and aggregate the variety of information that is published, online or in print, related to the principle that scholarly research should be freely accessible online. Members of the Coalition of Open Access Policy Institutions participate in the process of sorting, nominating and publishing the most relevant news, pulling from a collection of sources. Relevant, current, curated news and information about open access and scholarly publishing. The Coalition of Open Access Policy Institutions (COAPI) brings together representatives from North American universities with established faculty open access policies and Search Journals to see Their Submission Methods, and How They Compare to Open Access Submession Methods using Method A are not Good for Open Anything Public Access - nih The Public Access Policy ensures that the public has access to the published results of nih funded research to help advance science and improve human health.

Open Journal Systems “Scholars need the means to launch a new generation of journals committed to open access, and to help existing journals that elect to make the transition to open access…” Budapest Open Access Initiative, 2002 Open Journal Systems (OJS) is a journal management and publishing system that has been developed by the Public Knowledge Project through its federally funded efforts to expand and improve access to research. OJS Features

Open Access + Open Science

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  • Open Access Map | Charting the Growth and Development of Open Access Globally

    Open Access Publishing

    1. University of Virginia Library Supports Open Access Publishing

    EVENTS

    OA Week
    1. Open Access Week | University of Virginia Library

    Fellowships/Funding/Grants/Etc.

    UVA Open Access Fund

    The purpose of the U.Va. Library Open Access Fund is to support U.Va. faculty, researchers, staff, and students who wish to maximize their research impact by publishing in peer-reviewed open access journals. Apply now.

    Fellowship & Internship Opportunities @ University of Virginia Library Open Access at UVA - Members of the UVa community talk about their experience using LIBRA, the University of Virginia Library's Open Access Repository. LIBRA - Online Archive of University of Virginia Scholarship - Institutional Repository at University of Virginia Datasets | LIBRA Embed a mini Book Reader UC Open Access Policy Tools http://www.cdlib.org/services/access_publishing/publishing/oapolicy.html UC Open Access Policy http://osc.universityofcalifornia.edu/open-access-policy/ Get the Word Out! UC Has an Open Access Policy and OA Tools! http://osc.universityofcalifornia.edu/open-access-policy/get-the-word-out/ UCSF Open Access Policy https://www.library.ucsf.edu/services/scholpub/oa/policy Open Access Policy Implementation (OAPI) Project https://wiki.library.ucsf.edu/display/OAPI/Open+Access+Policy+Implementation+%28OAPI%29+Project