This paper reports on the extent to which higher education institutions in the UK have set up central funds and similar institutionally co-ordinated approaches to the payment of open access article-processing charges. It presents data demonstrating that central funds have only been set up by a minority of institutions and that the number of institutions has not changed significantly between 2009 and 2011. It then explores the barriers to the establishment of such funds and discusses recent developments that might lower these barriers. Finally, it provides a case study of the development of the central fund at the University of Nottingham in the UK and considers the sustainability of such an approach
Open Access (OA) policies have been adopted at the national, institutional and funder levels in the ...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
© 2018 by the authors. Whilst take-up of open access (OA) in the UK is growing rapidly due partly to...
This paper reports on the extent to which higher education institutions in the UK have set up centra...
This article analyzes researchers’ adoption of an institutional central fund (or faculty publication...
Having tracked and analysed the usage data of one university’s central open access fund over an eigh...
Many institutions have been awarded funds by the Research Councils UK (RCUK), in the form of a block...
This article analyzes researchers’ adoption of an institutional central fund (or faculty publication...
Funding bodies for higher education institutions (HEIs) in the United Kingdom (UK) have recently int...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
As open access (OA) publication of research outputs becomes increasingly common and is mandated by i...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
The Open Access (OA) movement has led to a rethinking and restructuring of traditional publishing fu...
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland has been a leader in the advance towards op...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
Open Access (OA) policies have been adopted at the national, institutional and funder levels in the ...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
© 2018 by the authors. Whilst take-up of open access (OA) in the UK is growing rapidly due partly to...
This paper reports on the extent to which higher education institutions in the UK have set up centra...
This article analyzes researchers’ adoption of an institutional central fund (or faculty publication...
Having tracked and analysed the usage data of one university’s central open access fund over an eigh...
Many institutions have been awarded funds by the Research Councils UK (RCUK), in the form of a block...
This article analyzes researchers’ adoption of an institutional central fund (or faculty publication...
Funding bodies for higher education institutions (HEIs) in the United Kingdom (UK) have recently int...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
As open access (OA) publication of research outputs becomes increasingly common and is mandated by i...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
The Open Access (OA) movement has led to a rethinking and restructuring of traditional publishing fu...
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland has been a leader in the advance towards op...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
Open Access (OA) policies have been adopted at the national, institutional and funder levels in the ...
As open-access (OA) publishing funded by article-processing charges (APCs) becomes more widely accep...
© 2018 by the authors. Whilst take-up of open access (OA) in the UK is growing rapidly due partly to...