Recent legislative activity in the US House of Representatives and the UK House of Commons has added fuel to a debate over electronic access to the Scientific, Technical and Medical (STM) literature that was initiated in 1999 with the introduction of E-Biomed. On-going efforts to change the landscape of STM publishing involve moving it away from a subscription basis to an author-pays model. This article chronicles the swift evolution of electronic access to the scientific literature and asks whether the scholarly community will really be better off with government-mandated open access (OA) publishing
Journal ArticleOpen Access offers real benefits to society. However, the net value of those benefits...
With the growth of open access publishing there has been a concomitant growth in the number of preda...
This report begins with an inventory of basic information: definitions and guides to histories of th...
Issues surrounding the implementation and sustainability of open access for commercial STM publisher
Open access publishing is providing a meaningful option to researchers and libraries outside of the ...
The Internet has made possible the cost-effective dissemination of scientific journals in the form o...
Richard Horton, the editor of Lancet states that the open access movement is about a historic reali...
Full and unimpeded access (Open Access) to science literature is needed. It is not provided by the t...
The steep rise in subscriptions costs to scientific publications and the potential of the internet h...
In the wake of declarations supporting open access to research literature from international bodies ...
Open-access publishing, which removes monetary and legal restrictions from Internet reading, provide...
Publishers are all in favour of maximising access to works of scholarship; it's good for authors, an...
Open Access (OA) publishing models have been building momentum for the past 20 years with far reachi...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The open access (OA) model for journals is compared to the open source principle for computer softwa...
Journal ArticleOpen Access offers real benefits to society. However, the net value of those benefits...
With the growth of open access publishing there has been a concomitant growth in the number of preda...
This report begins with an inventory of basic information: definitions and guides to histories of th...
Issues surrounding the implementation and sustainability of open access for commercial STM publisher
Open access publishing is providing a meaningful option to researchers and libraries outside of the ...
The Internet has made possible the cost-effective dissemination of scientific journals in the form o...
Richard Horton, the editor of Lancet states that the open access movement is about a historic reali...
Full and unimpeded access (Open Access) to science literature is needed. It is not provided by the t...
The steep rise in subscriptions costs to scientific publications and the potential of the internet h...
In the wake of declarations supporting open access to research literature from international bodies ...
Open-access publishing, which removes monetary and legal restrictions from Internet reading, provide...
Publishers are all in favour of maximising access to works of scholarship; it's good for authors, an...
Open Access (OA) publishing models have been building momentum for the past 20 years with far reachi...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The open access (OA) model for journals is compared to the open source principle for computer softwa...
Journal ArticleOpen Access offers real benefits to society. However, the net value of those benefits...
With the growth of open access publishing there has been a concomitant growth in the number of preda...
This report begins with an inventory of basic information: definitions and guides to histories of th...