Showing posts with label Green Open access. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Green Open access. Show all posts

Thursday, June 30, 2022

All about Open Access to Scholarly Research

 
All about Open Access to Scholarly Research

Tuesday, October 06, 2020

One Nation, One Subscription journal-access plan of India

 

One Nation, One Subscription journal-access plan of India

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   1. The plan will make scholarly literature accessible for free to everyone in the country
  1. 2. The proposal The government will negotiate with the world’s leading scientific publishers to set up a nationwide “One nation one subscription” journal-access plan to make the scholarly literature available to everyone for free which is currently limited to the scholars of individual institutions subscribing to it.
  2. 3. The proposal The proposal is being developed by the Office of the Principle Scientific Advisor to the Government of India and the Department of Science and Technology (DST). After being approved by the Cabinet, it is likely to happen before the year’s end.
  3. 4. Success of plan will depend upon  The willingness of publishers to negotiate nationwide subscription.  If the government could make it cheaper to give access to the paywalled literature to all citizens.
  4. 5. The idea of plan emerged from  The discussions about whether the country should join a global open access initiative “Plan S”.  According to Krishnaswamy VijayRaghavan, the principal scientific adviser to the Government of India, the government is not going to join Plan S.
  5. 6. What is Plan S ?  Making full and immediate Open Access a reality.  Plan S is an initiative for open access publishing launched in 2018, with the aim of making full and immediate access to the research publications a reality by January 2020, It is supported by an international consortium "cOAlition S”.
  6. 7. “With effect from 2021, all scholarly publications on the results from research funded by public or private grants provided by national, regional and international research councils and funding bodies, must be published in Open Access Journals, on Open Access Platforms, or made immediately available through Open Access Repositories without embargo.” (https://www.coalition-s.org/about/) The main Principle of Plan S
  7. 8. Plan S supports Gold route  Gold route of Open Access in which the articles are freely and permanently accessible to everyone, immediately after publication. These articles are published under creative commons license and also available to reuse as long as the authors are given proper acknowledgment as the copyrights to their work are retained by authors. These articles can be published in two types of journals.  Fully open access journal, in which articles are freely available online to everyone to read, usually after the author have paid Article Processing Charges.  Hybrid journals, which are subscription-based journals and have the option for Gold open access also if an author wish to publish in this category.  DOAJ (Directory of open access journal) is an online directory of fully open access journals (https://doaj.org/)
  8. 9. One Nation one Subscription favours Green route Green route of Open Access is all about the self-archiving permission provided by the publishers to their authors so that they can submit either the preprint or the postprint version of their articles (but before publication in a journal) in institutional repository making it freely accessible to everyone. The copyrights are retained by the publisher and the articles are freely accessible when the embargo period is over ( though the embargo period will not apply in all cases.) However, there is a limited restriction on the reuse of work.
  9. 10. Researchers’ rights  Here also the researchers has to wait for the embargo period is over ranging from few months to years to publish in repositories.  “Rights-retention” policies that ensure researchers keep the right to share their work in repositories without breaching copyright agreements. A growing number of institutions like Harvard University and funding agencies behind Plan S have introduced similar policies to keep the researchers rights safe.
  10. 11. Researchers’ rights  But according to Rahul Siddharthan, a computational biologist at the Institute of Mathematical Sciences in Chennai, India, and a member of the advisory group, “Existing repositories in India aren’t very popular, so there’s a risk researchers won’t get behind green open access unless policies are enforced”.
  11. 12. Ongoing debate on proposal  One group of members in the advisory group wants that government should pay Article Processing Charges (APCs) in reputed Open access journals for the researchers who are unable to bear these charges to publish. “Paying to publish is not good for countries like India, where resources for research are scarce,” says Madhan Muthu, a librarian at Azim Premji University in Bengaluru, who is part of the advisory group.
  12. 13.  Rahul Siddharthan, a computational biologist at the Institute of Mathematical Sciences in Chennai, India, and a member of the advisory group, also supports establishing a central government fund to pay APCs for reputable open-access journals.  On the other side some members are against the use of public funding for paying APCs. According to Muthu and Arul Scaria, an intellectual-property researcher at the National Law University in New Delhi and an advisory group member, “public funding should not be spent on publishing fees, in addition to subscription costs”.
  13. 14.  Some members suggest that India should be the part of global initiative to reform publishing system, but they are not against the proposal of national subscription if at reasonable rates.  According to Dominique Babini, an open-access advocate with the Latin American Council of Social Sciences in Buenos Aires, “Funding agencies should invest more in local and regional open-access journals that do not require authors to pay to publish, which make up about 70% of those listed in the international Directory of Open Access Journals”
  14. 15. References  https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02708-4  https://librarycognizance.blogspot.com/2019/05/gold-and- green-open-access-copyrights.html  https://librarycognizance.blogspot.com/2019/09/open-access- leading-to-goal-of.html  https://www.coalition-s.org/coalition-s-develops-rights- retention- strategy/#:~:text=The%20Rights%20Retention%20Strategy%20i s,with%20a%20CC%20BY%20license

Thursday, May 09, 2019

Gold and Green Open access: copyrights and self archiving rights make the difference


Gold and Green Open access: copyrights and self-archiving rights make the difference







What is Open Access?


Open access refers to any publication that is freely available to readers at no cost and has no restrictions/limited restrictions of reuse and self-archiving by their authors. From the author's point of view, it is important as their work gets seen by more and more people.
The scheme of using different colors (Gold, Green, Blue, Yellow, and White) to highlight publishers’ archiving policies was proposed by JISC funded RoMEO ((Rights Metadata for Open archiving) ) project in 2003  under the Open Archive Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH), in order to analyze the publishers' open access  policies from around the world and provide information about the self archiving permissions, various  rights and restrictions in standardize and summarized way that publishers impose on their authors.

Because both routes are related to self-archiving and permission issues, it is important to clarify the different versions of manuscripts (Preprints and Postprints).


Defining Preprints and Postprints



Preprint: A preprint is a full draft version of a scholarly article or research paper before it is peer-reviewed and published in a journal. it can be shared by the author before and after a paper is published in the journal.

Postprint: A postprint is a final version of a scholarly article or research paper after it is peer-reviewed and incorporated all the reviewers' comments and now ready to be published.


What is Gold Open Access?


The category of open access in which the articles are freely and permanently accessible to everyone, immediately after publication. These articles are published under creative commons license and also available to reuse as long as the authors are given proper acknowledgment as the copyrights to their work are retained by authors. These articles can be published in two types of journals.
Fully open access journal, in which articles are freely available online to everyone to read, usually after the author have paid Article Processing Charges.

Hybrid journals, which are subscription-based journals and have the option for Gold open access also if an author wish to publish in this category.

DOAJ (Directory of open access journal) is an online directory of fully open access journals (https://doaj.org/)


What is Green Open Access?


Green open access is all about the self-archiving permission provided by the publishers to their authors so that they can submit either the preprint or the postprint version of their articles (but before publication in a journal) in institutional repository making it freely accessible to everyone. The copyrights are retained by the publisher and the articles are freely accessible when the embargo period is over ( though the embargo period will not apply in all cases.) However, there is a limited restriction on the reuse of work.

A list of publishers’ self-archiving policies can be found on the Sherpa/RoMEO database (http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/index.php?la=en&fIDnum=%7C&mode=advanced)

“Sherpa/RoMEO is a searchable database of publisher's policies regarding the self- archiving of journal articles on the web and in Open Access repositories.RoMEO's own database covers over 22,000 journals. RoMEO also searches the Zetoc, DOAJ, and Entrez databases for additional journals.RoMEO contains publishers' general policies on self-archiving of journal articles and certain conference series. Each entry provides a summary of the publisher's policy, including what version of an article can be deposited, where it can be deposited, and any conditions that are attached to that deposit.”1







Depending on the restrictions imposed by publishers on the self-archiving rights of authors there are three more routes of Open Access.

Blue Open Access

In this authors are allowed to archive only the postprint version of their article.


Yellow Open Access

In this authors are allowed to archive only the preprint version of their article.



White Open Access

No archiving is allowed.



References:


To Know more:

Glossary: 

Paywall: A paywall is a method of restricting access to content via a paid subscription. (https://unpaywall.org/products/extension)

Peer review: It is the process of evaluating the scientific and research article by the group of experts in the appropriate field.