Higher education institutions are currently subsidising publishers at the expense of both the general public and the future standing of UK research, says Stevan Harna
This overview of the current status of Open Access (OA) to peer-reviewed research describes the step...
UK open access policy does not exist in a vacuum. Casey Brienza argues that UK researchers represent...
Open access developments have necessarily elicited response from the entire scholarly community. Her...
Unintended consequences of RCUK policy mean that if academics want open access publishing, publisher...
The UK government, under the joint influence of the publisher lobby and short-sighted advice from Op...
Universal Open Access (OA) is fully within the reach of the global research community: Research inst...
EU governments seem to prefer gold in the debate on Open Access. The problem with ‘gold’ is that oft...
Plans by universities and research funders to pay the costs of Open Access Publishing ("Gold OA") ar...
Irrespective of what funds the UK elects to spend on paying pre-emptively for Gold OA while subscrip...
The Web is destined to become humankind's Cognitive Commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
The UK’s universities and research funders have been leading the rest of the world in the movement t...
The House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills committee’s latest report, Open Access: Achievi...
Unintended consequences of RCUK policy mean that if academics want open access publishing, publisher...
In Vol 2, No 2 of feminists@law (2012) we published our response to the Finch Report as an Editorial...
The web is destined to become humankind's cognitive commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
This overview of the current status of Open Access (OA) to peer-reviewed research describes the step...
UK open access policy does not exist in a vacuum. Casey Brienza argues that UK researchers represent...
Open access developments have necessarily elicited response from the entire scholarly community. Her...
Unintended consequences of RCUK policy mean that if academics want open access publishing, publisher...
The UK government, under the joint influence of the publisher lobby and short-sighted advice from Op...
Universal Open Access (OA) is fully within the reach of the global research community: Research inst...
EU governments seem to prefer gold in the debate on Open Access. The problem with ‘gold’ is that oft...
Plans by universities and research funders to pay the costs of Open Access Publishing ("Gold OA") ar...
Irrespective of what funds the UK elects to spend on paying pre-emptively for Gold OA while subscrip...
The Web is destined to become humankind's Cognitive Commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
The UK’s universities and research funders have been leading the rest of the world in the movement t...
The House of Commons Business, Innovation and Skills committee’s latest report, Open Access: Achievi...
Unintended consequences of RCUK policy mean that if academics want open access publishing, publisher...
In Vol 2, No 2 of feminists@law (2012) we published our response to the Finch Report as an Editorial...
The web is destined to become humankind's cognitive commons, where digital knowledge is jointly crea...
This overview of the current status of Open Access (OA) to peer-reviewed research describes the step...
UK open access policy does not exist in a vacuum. Casey Brienza argues that UK researchers represent...
Open access developments have necessarily elicited response from the entire scholarly community. Her...