Golden opportunities? Emerging opportunities to expand access to Gold open access (OA) publishing

The evolution of the OA policy landscape is showing no signs of rest. With the implementation of plan S just months away, many of the legacy academic and scholarly publishers are busy amending their agreements with universities to ensure that they are compliant with plan S. Since UKRI- including all of the UK’s Research Councils- and others funders such as the Wellcome Trust are signatories of plan S, there is a clear intention for integral stakeholders to progress the existing OA landscape that has already been heavily shaped by existing policies.

What does this mean? 

The plan S principles intend to bring about “make full and immediate open access a reality.” Whilst the Green route to open access is explicitly supported, much of the orientation of the initiative is framed around traditional publication through journals, and in particular through the Gold route. 

Various business models support Gold OA publication. The APC (article processing charge) model has been the most widely implemented model by many of the legacy publishers. This means that the funding of Gold open access publication often relies on a payment on a per-article basis.

However, as universities traditionally pay subscriptions to publishers for access to scholarly materials, such monies have not been relieved from existing costs in the scholarly communication workflows. Indeed, universities may well have an increased total cost by the inclusion of APCs due to the simultaneous payments for access and publication within the same hybrid title, a phenomenon often referred to as ‘double dipping’. 

For funded research, access to funds to cover APCs is often provided in order to meet their stated mandates around Gold OA publication. However, for research that is not produced as a result of grants from specific funders may feel have more limited access to publish via the Gold method in journals of their interest due to a lack of funding to cover high APC costs. 

Changing practices 

As such, plan S requires some publishers to amend their operations and the deals that they offer to universities. The University has started to take advantage of some of these ‘transformative agreements’ that cover both the traditional access aspect of the publisher’s offering, but also a Gold OA publishing aspect. Such transformative deals were already offered by publishers such as Springer, and the University maintain their read and publish deal.

The University has recently signed Wiley’s read and publish deal, meaning that we can support our researchers to publish via Gold OA with Wiley without incurring APCs (please follow the links for further details on some of the limitations of the deal.) This means that works published through these deals are freely available to all immediately upon publication without barriers to access via the internet. The works are published under Creative Commons licenses (which we will generally recommend a preference for CC BY 4.0 in order to maximise reuse value and optimise the potential for increasing impact, but we will have a new blog post on this for you very soon!)  

The University is currently addressing other appropriate read and publish deals that are emerging in order to offer greater value to our communities of researchers. Sage are currently offering such a deal and this is being appraised by colleagues with experience in both the library and within Research Development Services (GRE). 

A mixed landscape 

The funding of OA publication is still a very diverse landscape. Many creative and experimental operations that are aiming to find stable revenue streams that are more equitable. For instance, the Open Library of Humanities are a pure Gold OA publisher, and they have never been funded through APCs. Instead, they offer the opportunity for universities to participate in a low-cost ‘partnership scheme’. This has provided stability, and allowed great value for money to be offered. 

Gold open access publishing in other areas, however, is still a major challenge for many. The evolution of electronic books has been far more stymied than that of the electric journal or journal articles. Proprietary formats, access credit models, and digital rights management (DRM) are just some of the many differences. Scaling monograph and book publishing to Gold open access has, as such, been incredibly slow.  

The Open Book Publishers and punctum books are two open access book publishers that offer viable OA publishing a in this area, and the initiatives such as the COPIM project aim to investigate how this area may be developed to broaden and deepen the open landscape for scholarly publication. 

Stability in unstable times? 

The landscape for Gold OA is still nascent, and there are many reasonable critiques of of the emerging policies and commercial offerings from some publishers, along with the political context in which the shift towards open access publication is occurring within. 

The complexities surrounding all of this can seem alienating and even frustrating for researchers that simply want to share their work with various communities. We want support your scholarly communication activities, and as such, we are always available to ask about anything and help take some of the administrative load that the contemporary scenario may yield.    

Plan S – Accelerating the transition to full and immediate Open Access

What is Plan S, what is the point?

Plan S is a set of principles designed by a group called cOAlition S that support and promote the benefits of Open Access and aim to facilitate full and immediate Open Access for funded research as soon as possible. They put the responsibility primarily on Publishers and Funders to change behaviours that have so far limited the take up of Open Access.  

Who is behind this?

cOAlition S is a group of national research funding organisations, led by Science Europe, with the support of the European Commission and the European Research Council.

Represented by UKRI for the UK, a wide range of other countries national funders have also joined: Austria, Finland, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Slovenia, Sweden, Jordan, Zambia. International funders Wellcome Trust, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation have also joined and show their full support.

What does it involve?

From 1 January 2021 the Principles of Plan S will come into force. In short, if your work is funded by a call that is published after 1 January 2021, any publications must be published in an Open Access venue or made openly and immediately available in an Open Access repository (like GALA) with no embargo.

Plan S provide 10 principles which can be found on their website.

But they basically break down to the following:

Your Funders:

  • Funders will lead the development of the criteria that Open Access journals, platforms and repositories must follow. This includes providing incentives to establish and support the development of new journals and platforms where there is a need.
  • This support also extends to Open Access publication fees (when required), which should also be covered by the Funders where possible.
  • Funders will support a diversity of business models for publishing Open Access, but they must also ensure that any APCs are value for money.
  • Funders will not support ‘hybrid’ model journals who charge both APCs and subscriptions for the same content. However, they may support journals that are in transition away from ‘hybrid’ to another model if there is a fixed deadline for the change.
  • Funders will monitor and sanction non-compliance.
  • Funders will make a commitment to responsible metrics, and no longer use anything other than the intrinsic merit of the work itself to assess supporting outputs in bids, stopping all use of Impact Factor (IF) or the knowledge of who published a paper.

Your Publishers/Journals:

  • Authors must be able to retain copyright of their publications and use CC-BY licenses to enable reuse.
  • All authors should be able to publish their work Open Access – there must be a variety of options available, individual researchers should not have to pay their own APCs

Other

  • Funders, Publishers, universities, libraries… all should be working together to align policies and make processes transparent.
  • The principles apply to everything, but cOAlition S acknowledge that putting processes in place for books and monographs will take significantly longer and as such the January 2021 deadline does not apply. A separate document will be provided in 2021.

How will this affect me? What do I need to do?

For now, you need to watch this space! As the funders and publishers make changes and updates to their policies and processes in the lead up to 2021, there will be more information available about which journals will comply with Plan S and in which way.

As it stands, for research funded by calls after January 2021, your outputs will need to be Open Access, either in an Open Access Journal, by paying an APC, or being put in the repository with no embargo.

New for 2019: Term-time Tuesdays!

Just a short post today – don’t forget help and support is available on all of the above here on the blog, on Twitter, in person and also by email and on Skype.

I’m normally based in various places around the Greenwich campus but starting this week, during term time, alternate Tuesdays I will now be spending at Avery Hill and Medway.

  • First and Third Tuesday (Medway Campus)
  • Second and Fourth Tuesday (Avery Hill)

I’ll be based in the Research and Enterprise Hub at Medway or the Avery Hill Library on those days so please drop by if you are in the area.

Obviously if you are at Avery Hill or Medway but aren’t available on a Tuesday, that isnt the end! Any other days, drop me a line, poke me on Skype, send a carrier pigeon, anything you want and we can chat, and I’ll come by if I can!

Contact the Research Outputs Manager (Kirsty Wallis: k.r.wallis@gre.ac.uk) or use gala@gre.ac.uk for specific compliance and GALA questions.