Open access developments have necessarily elicited response from the entire scholarly community. Here, David Prosser of Research Libraries UK clarifies the valued role of libraries in informing the debate and raises specific concerns over how the newly pledged £10 million by the Government is to be spent
With over 36 million visitors each month, the massive popularity of Academia.edu is uncontested. But...
The web is destined to become humankind's cognitive commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
House Appropriations Committee have recommended mandating that researchers provide Open Access (OA) ...
Much of the discussion about the merits of Open Access (OA) publishing has centred on the numbers; o...
Open Access (OA) is part of a global discussion about Open Scholarship and Open Knowledge.1 As publi...
Higher education institutions are currently subsidising publishers at the expense of both the genera...
The House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills committee’s latest report, Open Access: Achievi...
Government has made a good start on opening up a route to open access but it will be left to researc...
UK open access policy does not exist in a vacuum. Casey Brienza argues that UK researchers represent...
In an open access world, will journal subscription inflation simply be replaced by APC inflation? ...
The Web is destined to become humankind's Cognitive Commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
While recent policy developments have made huge strides for open access publishing, there is still g...
Irrespective of what funds the UK elects to spend on paying pre-emptively for Gold OA while subscrip...
EU governments seem to prefer gold in the debate on Open Access. The problem with ‘gold’ is that oft...
Progress towards open access to UK research reports is slow but steady. The growth in open access h...
With over 36 million visitors each month, the massive popularity of Academia.edu is uncontested. But...
The web is destined to become humankind's cognitive commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
House Appropriations Committee have recommended mandating that researchers provide Open Access (OA) ...
Much of the discussion about the merits of Open Access (OA) publishing has centred on the numbers; o...
Open Access (OA) is part of a global discussion about Open Scholarship and Open Knowledge.1 As publi...
Higher education institutions are currently subsidising publishers at the expense of both the genera...
The House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills committee’s latest report, Open Access: Achievi...
Government has made a good start on opening up a route to open access but it will be left to researc...
UK open access policy does not exist in a vacuum. Casey Brienza argues that UK researchers represent...
In an open access world, will journal subscription inflation simply be replaced by APC inflation? ...
The Web is destined to become humankind's Cognitive Commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
While recent policy developments have made huge strides for open access publishing, there is still g...
Irrespective of what funds the UK elects to spend on paying pre-emptively for Gold OA while subscrip...
EU governments seem to prefer gold in the debate on Open Access. The problem with ‘gold’ is that oft...
Progress towards open access to UK research reports is slow but steady. The growth in open access h...
With over 36 million visitors each month, the massive popularity of Academia.edu is uncontested. But...
The web is destined to become humankind's cognitive commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
House Appropriations Committee have recommended mandating that researchers provide Open Access (OA) ...