In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of the most striking developments in the scholarly communications landscape has been the increasing interest taken in open access at a policy level. Today, open access (in the form of both self-archiving and open access journals) is routinely discussed and debated at an institutional-level, within research-funding bodies, nationally, and internationally. The debate has moved out of the library and publisher communities to take a more central place in discussions on the ‘knowledge economy’, return on investment in research, and the nature of e-science. This paper looks at some of the public policy drivers that are impacting on scholarly communicat...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
In their opening reflection on Open Access (OA) in this special section, Fuchs and Sandoval (2013) a...
Open Access’ main goal is not the subversion of publishers’ role as driving actors in an oligopolist...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
There are several arguments for promoting the necessity of Open Access (OA). Public funded research ...
The Open Access (OA) movement regards OA modes of disseminating research as the unequivocal future o...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The need to provide open access to articles published in peer-reviewed scholarly journals is becomin...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The earliest public demonstrations in favor of open access go back some 12 years, with the letter of...
The earliest public demonstrations in favor of open access go back some 12 years, with the letter of...
<p>By all accounts, we’re past the tipping point with Open Access (OA). Over the past ten years, Ope...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
In their opening reflection on Open Access (OA) in this special section, Fuchs and Sandoval (2013) a...
Open Access’ main goal is not the subversion of publishers’ role as driving actors in an oligopolist...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
In the five years since the launch of the Budapest Open Access Initiative in February 2002, one of t...
There are several arguments for promoting the necessity of Open Access (OA). Public funded research ...
The Open Access (OA) movement regards OA modes of disseminating research as the unequivocal future o...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The need to provide open access to articles published in peer-reviewed scholarly journals is becomin...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The earliest public demonstrations in favor of open access go back some 12 years, with the letter of...
The earliest public demonstrations in favor of open access go back some 12 years, with the letter of...
<p>By all accounts, we’re past the tipping point with Open Access (OA). Over the past ten years, Ope...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
In their opening reflection on Open Access (OA) in this special section, Fuchs and Sandoval (2013) a...
Open Access’ main goal is not the subversion of publishers’ role as driving actors in an oligopolist...