The Green Road to Open Access: A Leveraged Transition
The Green Road to Open Access: A Leveraged Transition
What the research community needs, urgently, is free online access (Open Access, OA) to its own peer-reviewed research output. Researchers can provide that in two ways: by publishing their articles in OA journals (Gold OA) or by continuing to publish in non-OA journals and self-archiving their final peer-reviewed drafts in their own OA Institutional Repositories (Green OA). OA self-archiving, once it is mandated by research institutions and funders, can reliably generate 100% Green OA. Gold OA requires journals to convert to OA publishing (which is not in the hands of the research community) and it also requires the funds to cover the Gold OA publication costs. With 100% Green OA, the research community's access and impact problems are already solved. If and when 100% Green OA should cause significant cancellation pressure (no one knows whether or when that will happen, because OA Green grows anarchically, article by article, not journal by journal) then the cancellation pressure will cause cost-cutting, downsizing and eventually a leveraged transition to OA (Gold) publishing on the part of journals. As subscription revenues shrink, institutional windfall savings from cancellations grow. If and when journal subscriptions become unsustainable, per-article publishing costs will be low enough, and institutional savings will be high enough to cover them, because publishing will have downsized to just peer-review service provision alone, offloading text-generation onto authors and access-provision and archiving onto the global network of OA Institutional Repositories. Green OA will have leveraged a transition to Gold OA.
open access, self-archiving, library budgets, green OA, gold OA, institutional repositories, publication costs, publishing reform, leveraged transition, peer review
99-105
Harnad, Stevan
442ee520-71a1-4283-8e01-106693487d8b
November 2007
Harnad, Stevan
442ee520-71a1-4283-8e01-106693487d8b
Harnad, Stevan
(2007)
The Green Road to Open Access: A Leveraged Transition.
In,
Anna, Gacs
(ed.)
The Culture of Periodicals from the Perspective of the Electronic Age.
Éditions L'Harmattan, .
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
What the research community needs, urgently, is free online access (Open Access, OA) to its own peer-reviewed research output. Researchers can provide that in two ways: by publishing their articles in OA journals (Gold OA) or by continuing to publish in non-OA journals and self-archiving their final peer-reviewed drafts in their own OA Institutional Repositories (Green OA). OA self-archiving, once it is mandated by research institutions and funders, can reliably generate 100% Green OA. Gold OA requires journals to convert to OA publishing (which is not in the hands of the research community) and it also requires the funds to cover the Gold OA publication costs. With 100% Green OA, the research community's access and impact problems are already solved. If and when 100% Green OA should cause significant cancellation pressure (no one knows whether or when that will happen, because OA Green grows anarchically, article by article, not journal by journal) then the cancellation pressure will cause cost-cutting, downsizing and eventually a leveraged transition to OA (Gold) publishing on the part of journals. As subscription revenues shrink, institutional windfall savings from cancellations grow. If and when journal subscriptions become unsustainable, per-article publishing costs will be low enough, and institutional savings will be high enough to cover them, because publishing will have downsized to just peer-review service provision alone, offloading text-generation onto authors and access-provision and archiving onto the global network of OA Institutional Repositories. Green OA will have leveraged a transition to Gold OA.
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Published date: November 2007
Additional Information:
Chapter: 9
Keywords:
open access, self-archiving, library budgets, green OA, gold OA, institutional repositories, publication costs, publishing reform, leveraged transition, peer review
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 263309
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/263309
PURE UUID: 19e7ab85-5c4c-4024-a90e-a7ce6e2ee0c2
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Date deposited: 10 Jan 2007
Last modified: 20 Mar 2024 02:34
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Contributors
Author:
Stevan Harnad
Editor:
Gacs Anna
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