[LIS-Forum] Need for promoting use of Open Access journals

Mailing List Manager mailman at ncsi.iisc.ernet.in
Thu Jun 19 17:11:46 IST 2003


Date: Wed, 18 Jun 2003 14:39:10 +0530
From: Subbiah Arunachalam <arun at mssrf.res.in>

Here is a Press release that talks about the advantages of wholesale
embracing of the Open Access journals.

Regards.
Arun

17 June 2003
UK research, accessible for free, for everyone

UK leads world in publishing revolution to provide open access to scientific
research
More than 80,000 biology and medical researchers working at UK universities
can now share their research findings freely with fellow researchers,
funding bodies, students, journalists, and the general public worldwide.
Making the results of science and medical research openly available will aid
the global advancement of science and healthcare. Publishing in freely
accessible online journals will also make the UK higher education system
more cost-effective, by reducing the amount of money spent on journal
subscriptions.
The landmark deal announced today by The Joint Information Systems Committee
(JISC), a joint committee of HEFCE and other UK further and higher education
funding bodies, and open access publisher BioMed Central places the UK at
the forefront of the drive to make scientific research freely available on
the Internet. The BioMed Central membership agreement commences on the 1
July. From this date article-processing charges will be waived - for all UK
higher education staff - when publishing in any of BioMed Central's 90+
peer-reviewed journals in which all research content is freely accessible.
Dr Alicia Wise, Head of Development at JISC, explains the commitment by JISC
to fund open access publishing for the entire UK Higher Education community:
"This ground-breaking deal represents a major shift in the way that research
is undertaken and its outputs published and shared. The implications for
research and for our educational institutions beyond the health and medical
field are immense."
This is the first step of many that funding bodies are taking to ensure the
success of open access. For the academic and clinical research communities
working in UK Higher Education institutions, one of the biggest hurdles to
publishing in open access journals - cost - has been removed. Funding bodies
are now moving to acknowledge that authors who publish in open access
journals are providing a service to the scientific community.
The JISC deal means that 180 universities in the UK will now become BioMed
Central members. Together with the recent NHS England membership agreement1,
the vast majority of research produced in the UK could be published in open
access journals at no cost to the individual author.
Publisher Jan Velterop explains why this is so exciting for BioMed Central:
"JISC's support is of huge significance. The UK is taking the fastest and
the largest steps to become a completely open access environment for the
sharing of biology and medical research results. Unrestricted access to the
majority of UK biomedical research output is now a very real possibility.
This represents our largest deal to date, and is a sure sign that the tide
has turned to embrace open access."
BioMed Central now has more members in the UK than in any other country. The
UK is a major contributor to the global advance of knowledge. With just 1%
of the world's population, Britain funds 4.5% of all scientific research,
and produces 8.5% of the research articles that are published worldwide.2
BioMed Central and JISC look forward to seeing a fast-increasing proportion
of these articles published with open access, for the benefit of science and
society at large.
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