GLOBAL EQUITY IN OPEN ACCESS PUBLISHING
WORKSHOP SERIES ON PRACTICAL MECHANISMS AND ACTION PLANS TO REMOVE BARRIERS FOR READERS AND AUTHORS
Authors, globally, publish a large proportion of their research articles in scholarly journals that charge fees for open access. With fee-based open access publishing growing rapidly, there is increasing concern around equity.
It is important to identify the financial barriers that authors encounter and hear the challenges they face, particularly in resource-limited contexts, in order to develop actionable plans and practical mechanisms that ensure no author is limited in their opportunity to publish their accepted articles open access in the journals of their choice. For example:
- How can discounts and waiver programs be adjusted to enable more equitable access to open access publishing for authors, as a short-term strategy?
- What actions could foster open access publishing fees that are differentiated globally?
- What can funders, ministries and research administrators do to understand just how much money they are directing, collectively, to scholarly publishing? How can the global community assess the distribution of such funds and their impact, particularly for researchers in different resource contexts?
This workshop series is an opportunity for those who fund and produce research, including scientists and scholars, research administrators, libraries and library consortia, university leadership, science councils and grant funders, and ministries of research and education, to better understand the current tensions in the scholarly communication landscape and explore immediate and long-term actions they each can take to ensure open access publishing is delivered in accordance with these principles:
- Fees associated with open access publishing services should be fair, reasonable, transparent, and globally equitable;
- Scholarly communication is part of the research process and, as such, costs for open access publishing services should ultimately be borne by research funders and institutions;
- Spending on scientific publishing should enable global open access by both readers and authors.
The outcomes of this workshop series will inform immediate and long term actions on a global scale that the organizers will further discuss with additional stakeholders, including scholarly publishers, in 2024.
Organizers
Contact
Please write to contact@oa2020.org for any queries or suggestions regarding the workshop series.