 |
SPARC and SPARC Europe Support
Budapest Open Access Initiative
February 14, 2001
Dear SPARC and SPARC Europe Members and Affiliates:
The Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI), formally
announced today, aims to accelerate progress in the
international effort to make research articles in all
academic fields freely available on the Internet. SPARC
and SPARC Europe participated in the creation of BOAI
and have signed the founding statement of intent, along
with the Association of Research Libraries and many
other organizations and individuals. The OSI Information
Program of the Soros Foundations Network has committed
funding of 1 million US dollars per year for three years
in support of BOAI and open access projects. Please
see http://
www.soros.org/openaccess/ for the text of the Initiative,
the FAQ, and ways to add your name to the fast-growing
group of supporters.
SPARC and SPARC Europe participated in the creation
of BOAI and signed the Initiative because access to
knowledge is the central purpose of scholarly communication.
A system built on open access offers the prospect of
being less expensive to operate and of better serving
scholars, the scholarly process, and society. Given
these fundamentals, experiments with open access will
inevitably lead us toward enduring solutions. A number
of SPARC's publishing partners have already achieved
success as peer-reviewed open access journals (see http://www.arl.org/sparc/core/index.asp?page=c0)
and have signed BOAI as well. Working with SPARC partners,
affiliates, and members, we will expand on existing
efforts to demonstrate on a broader scale the possibility,
benefits, and financial underpinning of new economic
models for supporting the cost of publication. We also
will work actively with libraries and universities to
facilitate partnerships and explore their roles in enhancing
the effectiveness of scholarly communication.
BOAI builds on the work of societies, university presses,
and others who have demonstrated the possibility and
sustainability of affordable access models. SPARC continues
to support their activities enthusiastically.
Thank you for your time. If you have any questions
about SPARC's involvement in BOAI, please contact me
at alison@arl.org.
Best wishes, Alison Buckholtz
__________________________________
Budapest Open Access Initiative supported by the Open
Society Institute's Information Program
February 14, 2002
www.soros.org/openaccess/
The Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI), released
today, aims to accelerate progress in the international
effort to make research articles in all academic fields
freely available on the internet. The BOAI arises from
a meeting convened in Budapest by the Open Society Institute
(OSI).
The OSI Information Program is committing funding of
1 million US dollars per year for three years in support
of open access projects. Funding will include support
for:
- the development of business models and plans for
sustainable self-archiving and open access publishing;
- use of library networks (like the Electronic Information
for Libraries consortium, currently covering 40 countries
- see www.eifl.net)
to mobilize support for open access globally;
- support for researchers in low and middle income
countries to publish in open-access journals which
charge up front fees; ? development of software tools
and templates for open access publishing, self-archiving,
indexing and navigation;
- promotion of the open access philosophy among foundations
and donors, science and research funding agencies,
libraries and universities, as well as governments,
policymakers and international organizations worldwide.
OSI may also, at a later stage, provide direct seed
funding to certain types of open access and self-archiving
initiatives.
The Initiative has been signed by the Budapest participants
and hundreds of individuals and organizations from around
the world, including scientists and researchers, universities,
laboratories, libraries and library organizations, foundations,
journals, publishers, and learned societies. The Initiative
can be viewed at (www.soros.org/openaccess/).
The site also contains the list of signatories, suggestions
for action, and a comprehensive "frequently asked questions"
document. Individuals and institutions are encouraged
to use this interactive website to sign the Initiative
and learn how they can help to advance the movement.
OSI is a private operating and grant-making foundation
that develops and implements a range of programs in
civil society, education, media, public health and human
and women's rights, as well as social, legal, and economic
reform. OSI is at the center of an informal network
of foundations and organizations active in more than
50 countries worldwide that supports a range of programs.
Established in 1993 by investor and philanthropist George
Soros, OSI operates network-wide programs, grant-making
activities, and other international initiatives. OSI
provides support and assistance to Soros foundations
in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union, Haiti, Mongolia, South, Southern and West Africa,
and Latin America. For more information please visit
www.soros.org ..
The OSI Information Program oversees and coordinates
the network's activities in areas such as internet policy,
library and publishing support, and access to information.
For further information, please contact Melissa Hagemann,
mhagemann@sorosny.org.
|