Fair Open Access: LingOA and beyond

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Usage statistics in context - panel discussion on understanding usage, measuring success Peter Shepherd Project Director COUNTER AAP/PSP 9 February 2005.
Advertisements

Committed to making the worlds scientific and medical literature a public resource.
Academic Publishing is Evolving… Helping the world efficiently publish its knowledge Pete Binfield Co-Founder and Publisher PeerJ CRIStin Meeting, Norway.
Supporting Engagement in Open Access: a Publishers Perspective
Open Access in the UK Developments since the Finch Report Michael Jubb Research Information Network 5th Conference on Open Access Scholarly Publishing.
Open Access, Nijmegen, Centrum voor Ethiek, Open Access to scientific results easy in principle – hard in practice 1 Jos Engelen Netherlands.
The Finch Report and RCUK policies Michael Jubb Research Information Network 5 th Couperin Open Access Meeting 24 January 2013.
OPEN ACCESS Your Publisher of Choice DE GRUYTER OPEN Society-Pays Publishing Program.
e I FL Electronic Information for Libraries An idea born out of an ideal An Open Society Institute project for transition in developing countries.
10 years of Open Access at BioMed Central Matthew Cockerill Managing Director, BioMed Central.
Open access publishing: Your research on the world stage Nandita Quaderi PhD (Publisher) Fiona Pring (Senior Acquisitions Editor)
UCL LIBRARY SERVICES Opening up Research Content in the NHS: Open Access and the Finch report Dr Paul Ayris Director of UCL Library Services and UCL Copyright.
Scholarly Journal Publishing in Canada Canadian Association of Learned Journals Association canadienne des revues savantes Presented by: Johanne Provençal,
Guide to a successful PowerPoint design – simple is best
Open Access Journals in Latin America Abel L. Packer SciELO / FAPESP Program, Director Federal University of São Paulo Foundation, Advisor on Information.
Belinda Tiffen Director Library Open Access Publishing: What You Need to Know Research Week UTS:
Open Access Publishing for Learned Societies Experiences of Copernicus Publications Dr. Xenia van Edig | September 2014.
FIGARO - Federated Network of European Academic Publishers1 Federated Initiative of GAP and Roquade Bas Savenije Utrecht University The Open Archives Initiative:
Electronic publishing in academic environments: The FIGARO project Bas Savenije OAI Workshop, Geneva, October 17-19, 2002.
Presenter Name Hosting Institution Date OPENNESS: CONTRIBUTE, ACCESS, USE ACRL Scholarly Communications Roadshow: From Understanding to Engagement.
Scholarly Publishing in China: Overview and Opportunities Dr. Lifang Xu Publishing Science Department, School of Information Management, Wuhan University,
Open Access: An Introduction Edward Shreeves Director, Collections and Content Development University of Iowa Libraries
Encouraging Scholarly Communication OSU Oregon Library Association Conference, April 6, 2006 ******************************* Michael Boock.
© 2010 Koninklijke Bibliotheek – National Library of the Netherlands Open Access: Present Pitfalls and Future Scenarios Bas Savenije, Director General.
OA in the Humanities and Social Sciences 5th Conference on Open Access Scholarly Publishing September 18-20, 2013, Riga Eelco Ferwerda OAPEN Foundation.
1 Canadian National Site Licensing Project ICOLC 9, Newport, April 24, 2001 Canadian National Site Licensing Project (CNSLP) Project Update Deb deBruijn.
The access to information divide: Breaking down barriers Bas Savenije Director General KB, National Library of the Netherlands Stellenbosch Symposium /
Hybrid Open Access Cul-de-sac or shortcut towards Open Access? 5 th Conference on Open Access Scholarly Publishing (COASP) Riga, 19/9/2013 Falk Reckling.
Introducing customer experience Liam Earney Managing the total cost of publication.
Knowledge Unlatched: Enabling Open Access for Scholarly Books Dr Lucy Montgomery.
Are academic journals becoming obsolete? Ted Bergstrom University of California, Santa Barbara.
Towards Open Access in the Netherlands. Agenda  What is Open Access?  Goals of Open Access in the Netherlands  Why Open Access is important?  Green.
| 1 Commercial Scholarly publishing In the world of open access Derk Haank Edinburgh CEO Springer 11 April 2005 Science+ business media.
BioMed Central Editors’ Conference Agenda Wednesday 14 th May 2014, London Alex Christoforou Head of Customer Services and Membership Open Access Membership.
Open Access Publishing and the role of the Royal Society of Chemistry Ljubljana, Symposium Open Access and Licensing Options In Academic Libraries 1 st.
October 1st 2015Lars Bjørnshauge. Good Publishing Practice – Open Access journals how the Directory of Open Access Journals contributes! Presentation.
Journal of Phycology Patricia A. Wheeler, Editor ( )
Challenge the future Delft University of Technology The current state of Open Access Just de Leeuwe-TU Delft Library, Publishing advisor.
Is This a Quality Journal to Publish in? How can you Tell? March 21, 2016 NC Serials Conference Beth Bernhardt.
Open Access to Scholarly Publications A Brief Introduction.
A Transition to Fair Open Access
Western Regional Storage Trust (WEST) Business Model
The Finch Report and its Recommendations
Fair Open Access: LingOA and beyond
Are academic journals becoming obsolete?
Mathematics in Open Access
Periodicals, homepage of publishers
Breakout Session: Should You Consider Transitioning Your Journal to Open Access? Dagmar M. Meyer Policy Adviser, European Research Council Executive Agency.
A Transition to Fair Open Access
Open Access models for the humanities and the social sciences
MSC KARMEN ŠTULAR SOTOŠEK, NUK
Electronic publishing in academic environments: The FIGARO project
Library Consortia and Article Processing Charges: An ICOLC Survey
Making Open Access work for UK universities and researchers
A transition to Fair Open Access: LingOA, MathOA, and PsyOA
A model for the transition from subscription to Fair Open Access
Springer Compact APCs Looking at APC data from the 5 agreements
Towards 100% Open Access at the UT
Scientific Publishing in the Digital Age
The UK experience of offsetting
OpenAPC: A contribution to a
John Cox Associates Ltd
Diamond Open Access Models for Journals Tom Mosterd & Max Mosterd
Open Access to scientific publications
Power to the People? Committing the Scholarly Community to the Development of Open Science in Finland ILIDE Conference, Jasná, Slovakia, Pekka.
You publish. We care..
Heidi Imker and Dan Tracy Faculty Meeting Lightning Talk February 2019
cOAlition S: Making full and immediate Open Access a reality
Open access is possible!
Where can I publish my article in Open Access without extra costs?
Presentation transcript:

Fair Open Access: LingOA and beyond OpenAIRE workshop 'On the Road Towards a Sustainable Open Access Publishing Market' organised by LIBER on April 20th 2017

Fair Open Access | Comparing publishing models

Fair Open Access | Comparing publishing models

Fair Open Access | LingOA Proof of concept for a transition to Fair Open Access Publishers are asked to comply with our Conditions of Fair Open Access: 1. The title of the journal is owned by the editorial board or by a learned society. 2. Authors retain copyright and a CC-BY license applies. 3. Authors do not pay for APCs. APCs are paid by funding agencies and library consortia such as the Open Library of Humanities (OLH) 4. All articles are published in Full Open Access (no subscriptions, no ‘double dipping’) 5. Article processing charges (APCs) are low (< 1000 euros), transparent, and in proportion to the work of the publisher.

Fair Open Access | LingOA Flipping reputed journals in linguistics to Open Access:

Fair Open Access | LingOA Flipping reputed journals in linguistics to Open Access: Glossa 2016: 319 articles submitted, 51 published, 54 in production…

Fair Open Access | LingOA Flipping the journals proceeds in two stages: 1. The transition (3 years) ✻ The editorial board asks the publisher to comply with the conditions of Fair Open Access. ✻ If the publisher refuses to comply, the entire editorial board leaves the journals to set up a new journal with a publisher who does. ✻ APCs are paid for by a 3-year fund. For LingOA, the fund is financed by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO and the Association of Dutch Universities (VSNU). Radboud University Library provides a journal manager for the 4 journals. 2. The final stage (after 3 years) ✻ Journals have re-established their Impact Factor and indices ✻ APCs are paid by the consortium of libraries participating in the Open Library of Humanities (OLH) ensuring long-term sustainability

Fair Open Access | The Open Library of Humanities ✻ A non-profit, academic-led open access publisher for the humanities and social sciences ✻ Promotes flipping existing subscription journals to Open Access ✻ A library consortium model: - Participating libraries pay an annual membership fee (€500 - €1500) that pays for all APCs of OLH-associated journals - Libraries vote on which journals to admit to OLH - Over 220 libraries participate, including Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Carnegie Mellon, UCL, Cambridge, UCL etc ✻ Subscribes to Fair Open Access principles and is willing to work with any publishers who also do so. ✻ Provides a long-term sustainable solution for flipping existing journals from subscription to Fair Open Access, enabling libraries to redirect funds from subscriptions to APCs.

Fair Open Access | General features of the flipping model 1. Discipline-based ✻ Within each academic discipline, a foundation is set up that helps flipping established subscription journals to Fair Open Access ✻ Existing networks within the discipline are exploited to influence editors to flip their journal to FOA. 2. No author-facing Article Processing Charges (APCs) ✻ The foundation pays for APCs during the transition period ✻ it also covers legal advice costs associated with flipping the journals 3. Long-term sustainability ✻ After the transition period, journals join a worldwide library consortium such as the one provided by the Open Library of Humanities. ✻ The worldwide library consortium durably pays for APCs. ✻ Library funds are redirected from subscriptions to APCs.

Fair Open Access | Extending the model 1. Two additional disciplines In each discipline, 3 reputed journals are ready to flip 2. This requires transition funds from university consortia and funding agencies 3. The OLH library consortium model must be expanded beyond the humanities 4. DisciplineOAs must form an alliance

Fair Open Access | Conclusions ✻ The LingOA flipping model provides a tested roadmap for flipping subscription journals to Fair Open Access ✻ Investment in the funding for the transition period is temporary, long-term RoI is substantial. Downward price pressure on APCs. ✻ Library consortia on the model of the Open Library of Humanities enable library funds to be redirected from subscription to Open Access ✻ Change to Fair Open Access is driven by editors and authors ✻ Academics face no costs for publishing or accessing research results

Fair Open Access | Addresses and links Johan Rooryck (Leiden University) | j.e.c.v.rooryck@hum.leidenuniv.nl Saskia de Vries (Sampan Publishing) | s.c.j.devries@sampan.eu Martin Eve (Birkbeck - OLH) | martin.eve.@bbk.ac.uk www.openlibhums.org | www.lingoa.eu