A National Open Access Policy
The
following wording for a National
Policy on Open Access for [country-name] is suggested:
The [country-name]
Government expects the authors of papers
reporting publicly-funded research to maximise the accessibility, usage
and applications of their findings. To this end:
As a condition for
research funding, the [country-name] Government:
(2) encourages Government Grant Holders to set
access to their deposited papers to Open Access immediately upon
deposit and to
retain ownership of the copyright of published papers where possible;
(3) encourages Government Grant Holders to
publish in a suitable Open Access Journal where one exists; the
Government will
cover the publication costs, if any.
FAQs
What
are the benefits to researchers of Open Access?
As
authors, researchers benefit because their
research papers are given a much wider dissemination and can be read
without
restriction by anyone with Internet access. This increases the impact
of their
research. Indeed, evidence is accumulating to show that open access
articles
are cited 25-250% more than non-open access articles from the same
journal and
year1. As readers, researchers
benefit because they will increasingly be able to access and use the
full text
of all the research published in their area, not just the research
available to
them via the subscriptions their institution can afford.
What
are the benefits to [country-name]?
First,
[country-name's] research will be more accessible to global
researchers, hence
better known and more widely used and cited. The prestige of
high-profile
[country-name] researchers will increase; even lesser-known researchers
will
gain more exposure and impact. Second, all [country-name] research will
be open
to all [country-name] entrepreneurs and the general public with
Internet
access. This will be beneficial both commercially and culturally.
Third,
access, usage and citation data on this research will increasingly
become
available and analysable to help shape researchers', institutions' and
nations'
strategies and policies.
The final manuscript of the author's research paper should be deposited. This is the
author's own final draft, as accepted for journal publication,
including all
modifications resulting from the peer-review process. (In addition,
depositing
pre-peer-review preprint drafts is welcome, if the author desires early
priority and peer feedback, but this is of course not a requirement. In
some
cases publishers may permit their own published version, either in
SGML/XML or
PDF, to be deposited as well; this too is welcome, but not a
requirement.)
An
electronic version of the author's final
manuscript resulting from research supported, in whole or in part, by
Government funding must be deposited immediately
upon acceptance for publication.
Authors will
of course still decide in which journal they
choose to publish their research papers. They will merely have to
ensure that a
copy of the final, peer-reviewed paper is deposited in their
institutional
repository immediately upon acceptance for publication.
How
can I find out whether my journal has a policy compliant with
immediately
setting access as Open Access?
You
should consult the individual journal's policy which is given at:
http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo.php
or at http://romeo.eprints.org/publishers.html
What
is an open access journal?
An
open access journal makes articles it publishes freely accessible online2.
Some open access journals also cover their costs by charging the
author's
institution or funder for publication. The Government will cover such
open
access publication costs where needed.
What
kind of papers should I deposit?
The
policy applies to peer-reviewed, original (primary) research
publications and
reviews that have been supported, in whole or in part, by Government
funding.
The policy does not apply to book chapters, editorials, or book
reviews.
Do
I need to deposit my paper if the journal publishing my research
already
provides immediate open access to my articles?
Deposit
is not required but is still recommended even if a manuscript has been
accepted
by an open access journal. Your institution will still wish to have
your work
deposited in its repository to enable it to maintain a compete record
of
institutional research output.
1Ten-Year
Cross-Disciplinary Comparison of the Growth of Open Access and How it
Increases
Research Citation Impact. IEEE Data Engineering Bulletin, Vol. 28 No. 4,
December 2005
http://sites.computer.org/debull/A05dec/hajjem.pdf
http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/11688/
2
Directory of Open Access Journals www.doaj.org