11. Researcher [often] Unpaid Journal
Researcher Publisher
Does the Peer Review. Publishes content.
research.
Charges researcher (and
Writes the public) to access the article
article. they have written (and funded)
25. deposit often follows an
Green Open Access
embargo period set by
the publisher...
... version deposited is
normally an author ’s
final peer-reviewed
manuscript.
30. hybrid open access
published in a traditional journal...
... publisher provides gold OA for
individual articles...
31. hybrid open access
published in a traditional journal...
... publisher provides gold OA for
individual articles...
... in return for APC paid by or on
behalf of author.
41. - journals must provide immediate
gold OA and allow deposit under a
CC-BY licence
42. - journals must provide immediate
gold OA and allow deposit under a
CC-BY licence
or if not…
43. - journals must provide immediate
gold OA and allow deposit under a
CC-BY licence
or if not…
- allow green OA after a maximum
of 6 months (12 months for AHRC
and ESRC).
46. ... from April 2013 will only
fund Gold OA charges
through block grants to
each HEI...
47. ... to be managed
centrally by each
institution.
48. • How will authors know where to publish?
• How will APCs be paid?
• How will a central open access fund be
managed, and by whom?
• Double-dipping (paying journal
subscriptions AND paying to publish in
them).
49. Picture Credits
[8] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by WhatDaveSees: Original
available here
[3,4] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by jekert gwapo: Original
available here
[5] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Darwin Bell: Original
available here
[7] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Carol VanHook: Original
available here
[9] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Richard Cocks: Original
available here
50. Picture Credits
[13] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Photo Extremist:
Original available here
[21] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Daniel*1977: Original
available here
[22, 23] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by 100kr: Original
available here
[24, 25] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by tao_zhyn: Original
available here
[12, 16, 30, 31] Created using http://photofunia.com/
51. Picture Credits
[32] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by ViaMoi: Original
available here
[41] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Lucy Tartan: Original
available here
[44] Via Flickr Creative Commons, and by Howard Lake: Original
available here
Notas do Editor
Also...Knowledge as a public good, restricted in private hands...... an ineffective and out-dated publishing system penalises the less wealthy
... Also the ‘self-interest’ argument for researchers. If their institutions can’t afford the resources, they won’t have access. Or they could provide access, but cut financial resources for researchers elsewhere.
Traditional model, but above inflation price increases for journal subscriptions have angered authors and restricted access of even the richest of academic institutions.
The situation is even worse in the developing world, where journal subscription prices mean that many institutions simply cannot afford access to up-to-date research.
“every industry that becomes digital, eventually becomes free”... except news international.
Report published June 16th 2012
Wellcome Trust announcement 28th June 2012
Compliant cat... Tenuous inclusion of cute furry animal towards end of slideshow.
Current phrasing of policy, which has received some criticism, is that if a journal offers option 1, an author must chose this option.
Current phrasing of policy, which has received some criticism, is that if a journal offers option 1, an author must chose this option.
Current phrasing of policy, which has received some criticism, is that if a journal offers option 1, an author must chose this option.
How will decisions be made as to who is more deserving of funds from a finite funding pot (early career researchers vs. REF submission research)