Open Access NewsNews from the open access movement Jump to navigation |
|||
Universities UK has endorsed the RCUK open-access policy. Unfortunately the links to its statement and press release are both dead at the moment. (Assume the problem is temporary and try them later.)
Meantime, you can get a sense of the organization's position from a BBC news story, Call for free access to research, September 7, 2005. Excerpt: In a position statement, Universities UK supports moves to broaden access away from subscription-based journals and - more recently - [subscription-based] websites. The organisation argues that such academic material is vital to national productivity and well-being. Its intervention is the latest in a long-running debate about the public accessiblity of research findings. Universities UK says freeing up research would also increase the number of times it is cited by other academics - which in turn boosts researchers' claims to funding....The president of Universities UK, Professor Drummond Bone, said: "Publicly funded research undertaken in UK universities lies at the heart of a productive economy, as well as supporting the physical, social and cultural health of the nation. "Ensuring that the main outputs of research - ideas and knowledge - are disseminated widely is vitally important. "Universities UK supports moves by the research community and publishers to develop new publishing models that are based on the principle that research outcomes should be disseminated and freely accessed as widely as possible."...The universities say the subscription-based system of scholarly communication has served the research community well in the past but "now operates at a sub-optimal level". A key problem has been rapidly increasing journal prices - up 58% between 1998 and 2003, compared with a general inflation rate of 11%. Developments in electronic publishing have made possible a fundamental change, they argue. In a report last year, the House of Commons science and technology committee also called for publicly-funded research to be made freely available online in archived digital information banks....Universities UK says [non-profit learned societies] play a crucial role and the effect of any change on them should be monitored closely. But it says there are sustainable ways forward, probably involving a mixture of the current system and new ways of doing things, such as having those who fund the research meet the publication costs. Update. Try these new links for the Universities UK statement and press release. |
|||