[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
32nd Green Open Access Mandate: Kudos and Caveat
** Cross-Posted **
Fully hyperlinked version:
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/288-guid.html
The UK's Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) is now the
6th of the 7 UK Research Councils to adopt a Green Open Access
Self-Archiving Mandate
http://www.eprints.org/signup/fulllist.php
(That makes AHRC's the 18th funder OA mandate, in addition to 14
university and departmental mandates, 2 proposed multi-university
mandates, and 4 proposed funder mandates, for a total of 38 Green
OA mandates adopted and proposed worldwide so far.)
Like most of the mandates adopted so far, the AHRC has some
needless, easily-corrected flaws, but first, let us (with Dr.
Johnson) applaud the fact that it has been adopted at all: Bravo
AHRC!
Now the mandate's completely unnecessary and
ever-so-easily-corrected flaw:
In their anxiety to ensure that their policy is both legal and
not needlessly worrisome for publishers, AHRC (and many of the
other funder mandates, including yesterday's CIHR mandate from
Canada) have allowed an embargo period before the article is made
OA, if the publisher wishes.
That is fine. But it is a huge mistake to allow the time at which
the article must be deposited to be dictated by the publisher's
embargo.
The deposit should be required immediately upon acceptance for
publication, without exception. If there is no publisher embargo,
that deposit is also immediately made Open Access at that same
time. Otherwise it is made Closed Access for the duration of the
embargo period. (Only the bibliographic metadata are visible and
accessible via the web, not the article itself.)
It may seem pointless to require an article to be deposited
immediately if it cannot be made OA immediately. But the point of
requiring immediate deposit either way is to close a profound
loophole that could otherwise delay both deposit and OA
indefinitely, turning the mandate into a mockery from which any
researcher can opt out at the behest of his publisher.
The early mandators have been very progressive and helpful in
having adopted OA mandates at all, but now that mandates are
spreading, it is important to optimize them, and plug the
needless loopholes. Otherwise the mandates will suffer the same
fate as the ill-fated NIH Public Access Policy, which failed so
badly that its self-archiving rate was even lower than the
spontaneous baseline for random self-archiving, in the absence of
any policy at all. (The proposed NIH policy upgrade to a mandate
is now one of the 4 pending funder mandate proposals).
Optimizing OA Self-Archiving Mandates:
What? Where? When? Why? How?
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/136-guid.html
The Immediate-Deposit/Optional Access (ID/OA) Mandate:
Rationale and Model
http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/71-guid.html
OA mandators (and those proposing or contemplating OA mandates):
Please consult the above links, as well as Peter Suber's critique
below, and then do the minor tweaks that are the only thing
needed to transform your policies into reliable, effective
mandates, setting an example worthy of emulation by others.
Stevan Harnad