Dr Steven Hill, Head of Research Policy, HEFCE
Outlined HEFCE’s current approach to Open Access for the REF
after 2014.
He explained that the REF principles were to:
·
Maximise access to outputs
·
Sustain scholarly communication
·
Continue to evaluate the approach to Open Access
The current position is that outputs submitted to the post-2014 REF should be Open Access
However, “the challenge is in the detail, not the overall aims”
Consultation about this detail has just ended http://www.hefce.ac.uk/whatwedo/rsrch/rinfrastruct/oa/
Decisions need to be made about:
1.
The proposed criteria for open access. How do we judge whether an output is Open
Access? HEFECE proposes that to be Open Access an output should be:
Available as the final peer-review text as
a minimum
Does not need to be publicly available at
the time of the REF deadline but en route to be so
May have embargo periods
Should allow manual and automatic search
and re-use of content including downloading and text-mining
2.
The definition of the research outputs to which
the criteria will apply. HEFCE proposes these will be:
Journal articles
Conference proceedings
Not monographs (Professor Geoffrey
Crossick, University of London, leading investigations into monographs)
A two year notice period of the OA
requirement will apply
3.
The proposed approaches to allowing exceptions
from the open-access requirement. These are EITHER that this could be on a case
by case basis with 100% as the target OR that different percentage targets are
set for each panel.
Professor Rosemary
Hunter, Professor of Law, Kent Law School
Talked about her experiences establishing an Open Access
journal feminists@law
She wished to dispel the myth that free online journals are
vanity publishing. In her opinion the
benefits of “Diamond” or “Platinum” publishing via a free open access online
journal (neither Gold, nor Green but in-between) are:
·
No Article Processing Charges (APCs)needed
·
Citation statistics prove that OA articles are
more frequently cited
·
Free Open Source journal software can be used
·
Less well–endowed institutions who cannot afford
to pay APC’s can produce OA articles
Business model/Design
Open Journal System software used (flexible and with a good
back end for referencing, editing, admin work)
Hosted in USA at a cost of £500 a year (financed by
Information Services at University of Kent)
“Free” academic labour for review, editing, proof readingKent therefore has an established model for hosting open access journals. See http://www.kent.ac.uk/library/research/open-access/index.html?tab=oa-journals
“Because good research needs good data”
Digital Curation Centre provides training, guidance,
overview of funders’ data policies, example data management plans http://www.dcc.ac.uk/about-us
Also Digital Curation Centre/University of
Cambridge/University of Glasgow Incremental project - Really useful resources
and guidance on research data management and open access http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/dataman/
Dr Michael Jubb, Research Information Network
Open Access – where are we now?
Explained the background to the 2012 Finch Report http://www.researchinfonet.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Finch-Group-report-FINAL-VERSION.pdf
which was followed by the RCUK policy on Open Access http://www.rcuk.ac.uk/documents/documents/RCUKOpenAccessPolicy.pdf
Finch committee met a few weeks ago and a 2nd
Finch report is coming out.
RIN have published a report on how universities are coping
with implementing the RCUK Open Access requirements http://www.researchinfonet.org/publish/rcuk-oa-requirements/
Lively debate has followed the Finch report including two
parliamentary debates. See the Sep 2012 House
of Commons Select Committee on Business, Innovations and Skills report on Open
Access publishing http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201314/cmselect/cmbis/99/9911.htm
Among other things, this recommends that more weight be
given to the Green route and that funding should not be given for APCs for
hybrid journals because this effectively means that funders/universities are
paying twice: once for publication and once for subscription. Unresolved tension exists between the Gold
and the Green route.
No comments:
Post a Comment