*This is an online version of a handout by Jill Cirasella (jcirasella@gc.cuny.edu) which is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license. For much more information, see “Open Access to Scholarly Literature: Which Side Are You On?” slides @ http://tinyurl.com/OAwhichside.
What is the problem?
Content by Jill Cirasella / Graphic Design by Les LaRue (http://www.leslarue.com), used under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US)
What is the solution?
Open access to scholarly journal articles! Open access (OA) articles are:
- accessible at no cost on a journal website or in a repository committed to long-term archiving.
- available for all to read, download, print, copy, share, etc. (attribution always required, of course).
How do we achieve open access? There are two paths to open access:
- Gold OA: Publish with publishers that automatically and immediately make the work available online to all at no cost. (Yes, some gold OA charge article publication fees. No, that doesn’t mean they’re vanity publishers. And no, those fees don’t necessarily come from authors’ pockets — they’re often paid by grant funds or institutional open access funds, and some publishers are willing to waive their fees.)
- Green OA: Publish with publishers that allow authors to archive their articles in an online open access repository committed to long-term preservation — either a subject repository (e.g., PubMed Central, arXiv, SSRN) or a college/university institutional repository.
How can you find gold OA journals?
The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) contains information about 9000+ gold OA journals: http://www.doaj.org/
How can you find green OA journals?
SHERPA/RoMEO provides easy-to-read summaries of journals’ copyright and self-archiving policies: http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/
You may have more rights than you realize!
According to SHERPA/RoMEO, as of Nov. 2011 (http://romeo.jiscinvolve.org/wp/2011/11/24/):
- 87% of scholarly journals allow immediate self-archiving of some version of the article.
- 60% of scholarly journals allow immediate self-archiving of the post-refereed version (including the 16% that allow immediate self-archiving of the final, published PDF).
- After the expiration of embargo periods (usually 6 to 24 months), 94% allow self-archiving of the post-refereed or PDF version of the article.
Can I negotiate my contract?
Sometimes. Your best shot is the Scholar’s Copyright Addendum Engine: http://scholars.sciencecommons.org/
Advice to authors: Know your rights to what you write!
- Research any journal you’re considering. (Quality? Peer reviewing process? Copyright policy?)
- If you have the right to self-archive, exercise that right.
- If you don’t have the right to self-archive, request it.
- Choose the best publishing venue for you and your career…
- …but also think about the system you’re contributing to and the one you want to contribute to.
Who and what benefits from open access?
Students, teachers, professors, researchers, libraries, universities, developing countries, health care providers, patients, journalists, policymakers, voters, the environment, consumer organizations, small businesses, Wikipedia — everyone, everywhere, everything!
Even authors benefit! (Open access isn’t just altruistic!)
If an article is open access, it’s more likely to be read and more likely to be cited. Learn about the “open access advantage” for article authors: http://opcit.eprints.org/oacitation-biblio.html
Want to know more?
Skim or read the brief book Open Access (which is itself open access) by Peter Suber: http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/open-access.