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Press Release
Leading European Library Organization
firmly supports Research Councils UK new open access
policy
Policy that requires UK-funded research
be deposited in openly accessible archives will strengthen
increased investment in research.
July 14, 2005
For more information, contact: David
Prosser, david.prosser@bodley.ox.ac.uk
Oxford, UK — SPARC Europe (Scholarly
Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition), a leading
organization of European research libraries, calls for
wide support for the proposed policy released by Research
Councils UK (RCUK), the main public investor in fundamental
research in the UK. The policy, announced in June, requires
Research Council grantees to deposit the resulting research
reports into openly accessible repositories in order
to speed and widen dissemination.
David Prosser, Director of SPARC Europe, commented –
‘We are currently in the position where UK researchers
cannot get easy access to all the work of their peers,
despite the vast majority of it being published online.
So, while the UK Government has greatly increased research
spending, to £2.4B for the Research Councils,
the return on this investment is not maximized. If implemented,
the RCUK policy would rectify this.’ RCUK spent
over a year consulting universities, academic libraries,
researchers, and publishers to develop a fair, well-balanced
policy that covers research outputs in the form of journal
articles or conference proceedings. SPARC Europe encourages
submission of favourable comments that support the draft
during the public comment period set to end August 31st.
According to RCUK, one of the policy’s cornerstones
is that ‘ideas and knowledge derived from publicly-funded
research must be made available and accessible for public
use, interrogation, and scrutiny, as widely, rapidly
and effectively as practicable.’ The Research
Councils will therefore require grant holders to deposit
copies of any resultant published journal articles and
conference proceedings in suitable open access institutional
or subject-based repositories. These repositories are
online databases that provide an electronic archive
of the research that is immediately and openly available
over the Internet. To further improve access to publicly
funded research, the Research Councils will also make
funds available for researchers to pay open access journal
publication fees. While encouraging the practice of
publishing articles in open access journals, the policy
preserves academic freedom by not mandating submissions
to such journals.
The academic libraries represented by SPARC Europe
look forward to the challenge of working with their
academics, the Research Councils, and publishers to
maximize research impact by implementing the policy.
‘Many of our members, especially in the UK, already
have great experience with running institutional repositories
and there is a strong commitment to further develop
these repositories as research tools,’ said David
Prosser. ‘Ensuring access to high-quality, peer-reviewed
research is one of the central remits of the library
and the new policy will enable greater access to a wider
range of research, so benefiting researchers, students,
and society in general.’
The full RCUK policy, together with
details of the consultation process, can be found at
http://www.rcuk.ac.uk/access/index.asp
SPARC
Europe is an alliance of 110 research-led university
libraries from 14 European countries. It is affiliated
with SPARC based
in Washington, D.C., which represents over 200 institutions,
mainly in North America. SPARC Europe and SPARC work
to develop and promote new models of scholarly communication
that increase the access to and utility of the research
literature.
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