An anniversary issue of Ariadne commissioned articles to predict the landscape ten years ahead. This contribution concludes that Open Access is a battleground where a ragamuffin band of academics and librarians are challenging the imperial pomp of billion dollar global companies. In those terms the contest is both unequal and unwinnable, since too much inertia is built into the system. However, as the article tries to show there are powerful drivers and change agents in place - technology; the nature of research; Google; national interest - which coupled with the sheer bloody-mindedness and persistence of the proponents of open access will lead to its growth as the dominant form of scholarly discourse. Whether that scholarly discourse will ...
With over 36 million visitors each month, the massive popularity of Academia.edu is uncontested. But...
Despite conspicuous progress in providing open access to scholarly articles, there is a steady, unse...
This reflection introduces a new term to the debate on open access publishing: diamond open access (...
An anniversary issue of Ariadne commissioned articles to predict the landscape ten years ahead. This...
<p>By all accounts, we’re past the tipping point with Open Access (OA). Over the past ten years, Ope...
<p>During 2012, the landscape surrounding Open Access began to radically shift. What started out a d...
Nearly a decade ago I ruminated on the place open access publishing might have in political studies,...
Open access has changed. At the beginning of the millennium, it was portrayed in a romanticizing way...
Open Access has revolutionized the way academic knowledge is disseminated, accessed and shared globa...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
Open access has come of age in the UK. After a decade in which academic librarians have found it har...
With 94% of US graduate students reportedly using search engines such as Google to perform research ...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
A year ago, I concluded that we had failed in our quest to make scholarship open access (OA): the ra...
As recent news on the HAU and Springer Machine Intelligence journal show, Open Access needs to be pa...
With over 36 million visitors each month, the massive popularity of Academia.edu is uncontested. But...
Despite conspicuous progress in providing open access to scholarly articles, there is a steady, unse...
This reflection introduces a new term to the debate on open access publishing: diamond open access (...
An anniversary issue of Ariadne commissioned articles to predict the landscape ten years ahead. This...
<p>By all accounts, we’re past the tipping point with Open Access (OA). Over the past ten years, Ope...
<p>During 2012, the landscape surrounding Open Access began to radically shift. What started out a d...
Nearly a decade ago I ruminated on the place open access publishing might have in political studies,...
Open access has changed. At the beginning of the millennium, it was portrayed in a romanticizing way...
Open Access has revolutionized the way academic knowledge is disseminated, accessed and shared globa...
This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The published arti...
Open access has come of age in the UK. After a decade in which academic librarians have found it har...
With 94% of US graduate students reportedly using search engines such as Google to perform research ...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
A year ago, I concluded that we had failed in our quest to make scholarship open access (OA): the ra...
As recent news on the HAU and Springer Machine Intelligence journal show, Open Access needs to be pa...
With over 36 million visitors each month, the massive popularity of Academia.edu is uncontested. But...
Despite conspicuous progress in providing open access to scholarly articles, there is a steady, unse...
This reflection introduces a new term to the debate on open access publishing: diamond open access (...