International Identifier for serials
and other continuing resources, in the electronic and print world

The Fully OA agreement – an essential component of a diverse open access world

The post calls for a greater focus on “Fully OA” publishing agreements and argues that while much time and energy is devoted to Transformative Agreements and transforming subscription models, a balanced approach whereby institutions also partner with fully OA publishers is optimal. It contains a list of the benefits of fully OA agreements and a Call to Action.

The Country-Level Degrowth of Open Access in Australia

Whereas an OASPA webinar, from late March 2021, has concentrated on Australia’s transition to Open Access, it has also indicated a peak in its Open Access output occurring in 2018. This is similar to the degrowth tendencies setting in across some other countries in two recent years. This transition phase certainly derives from a significant contraction in the Green Open Access output and a comparatively slower pace of growth in the Gold Open Access output in this period.

Decolonizing Open Access in Development Research: Open Access in Indonesia

Despite the absence of funding pressures that explicitly mandate a shift to open access (OA), Indonesia is a leader in OA publishing. Indonesia subscribes to a non‐profit model of OA, which differs from that promoted by Plan S. The penetration of bibliometric systems of academic performance assessment is pushing Indonesian scholars away from a local non‐profit model of OA to a model based on high publication charges. This article considers whether Plan S promotes or undermines the ability of Indonesian scholars to develop systems of OA adapted to local resource constraints and research needs.

Una relación en tensión: ciencia abierta y evaluación científica en Iberoamérica / A relationship in tension: open science and scientific assessment in Ibero-America

El objetivo que persigue el informe Tendencias Recientes en las Políticas Científicas de Ciencia Abierta y Acceso Abierto en Iberoamérica es analizar el estado de las investigaciones y las políticas científicas en ciencia abierta, datos abiertos de investigación y acceso abierto en Iberoamérica, haciendo hincapié en la incidencia de estos paradigmas en la evaluación científica. Este informe es el primer producto de un convenio de colaboración entre CLACSO y la Fundación Carolina para hacer avanzar la ciencia abierta y la evaluación científica en Iberoamérica.

Knowledge Unlatched: results of 2020 pledging, extends to hundreds of titles in 2021

Knowledge Unlatched (KU), has announced the results of 2020 pledging round, which ended in December 2020. Overall, about 310 books and 34 journals will be published OA in 2021. KU will continue to make the title lists for each collection and unlatching status transparent and update this information regularly, so that librarians can clearly understand which titles are unlatched or will be unlatched soon. Some 630 institutions worldwide have supported KU initiatives to date. By the end of this year, KU’s total impact will number around 2,700 books, and over 50 journals made OA.

Open Access surpasses subscription publications globally for the first time

Dimensions is a research services portal and citation index alternative to Scopus and Web of Knowledge. Together with the linked, preprint version, the new version of Dimensions gives you the most complete history of an article in one place. Indications of the different routes are available: Green, Bronze, Gold, Hybrid, All OA and Closed. While Bronze and Green OA make up a significant proportion of All OA, the majority of the growth in OA is fuelled by the Gold OA.

[Ver el articulo en español]

Major OA Diamond Journals Study completed: Report emphasizes diversity and sustainable pathways for diamond Open Access

From June 2020 to February 2021, a consortium of 10 organisations led by OPERAS (Open scholarly communication in the European research area for social sciences and humanities)  undertook a large-scale study on open access journals across the world that are free for readers and authors, usually referred to as “OA diamond journals”. This study was commissioned by cOAlition S in order to gain a better understanding of the OA diamond landscape. In the part 1 named Findings, it is observed that ROAD, the ISSN Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources, being more inclusive than DOAJ, “is potentially listing many journals that are diamond and that may have sufficient quality but that have not yet applied for inclusion in DOAJ […] ROAD indirectly helps assess the total number of diamond journals statistically by matching the full database with databases that do have information on fee-charging, and by manually checking a sample of journals.”

Find out more about the study and its recommendations.

Notify: Repository and Services Interoperability Project

On January 28, 2021, COAR launched the Notify: Repository and Services Interoperability Project. The aim is to develop a standard and interoperable approach that will link reviews and endorsements from different services with the research outputs housed in the distributed network of preprint servers, archives, and repositories.

COAR has already developed a proposed model for (bi-directionally) linking resources held in repositories with related resources held in networked services using a distributed, message-oriented approach based on W3C Linked Data Notifications (LDN). The COAR model is described and illustrated in Modelling Overlay Peer Review Processes with Linked Data Notifications.

DOAJ’s strategy 2021 to 2022

DOAJ’s mission is to increase the visibility, accessibility, reputation, usage and impact of quality, peer-reviewed, open access scholarly research journals globally, regardless of discipline, geography or language. DOAJ is committed to being 100% independent and maintaining all of its primary services and metadata as free for everyone. See the details of their stategy until the end of 2022.

Decolonizing Scholarly Communications through Bibliodiversity

This contribution examines the distinctive, non-commercial approach to open access (OA) found in Latin America and reflects on how greater diversity in OA infrastructures helps to address inequalities in global knowledge production as well as knowledge access. Kathleen Shearer/COAR and Arianna Becerril-García/Redalyc.org, AmeliCA, argue that bibliodiversity, rather than adoption of standardized models of OA, is central to the development of a more equitable system of knowledge production.