open access in southern european countries: the current situation and its implications for libraries
DESCRIPTION
The aim is to describe the situation of open access in six countries of Southern Europe (Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Greece and Turkey). These countries share some common features in the field of scientific communication, such as a significant presence of their own languages in scientific dissemination, the predominance of publications in Social Sciences and Humanities, the low proportion of commercial publishers, and a lack of interest in standardizing publications to increase their quality and visibility. We want to provide an overview of the current situation of the six countries with regard to four areas (scientific journals, books, institutional repositories, and policies for promoting open access) and also some considerations and reflections about future actions that can be carried out by libraries. (This presentation will be based upon the "Conclusions" of the report Open access in Southern European countries, Madrid: Fecyt, 2010).TRANSCRIPT
Open access in Southern European countries: the current situation and its
implications for libraries
Ernest Abadal. Universitat de BarcelonaLluís Anglada. CBUC
E. Abadal, L. Anglada. Open access in Southern European countries 2
Contents
1. Introduction2. The action3. Results
• Journals• Repositories• Policies• Alhambra Declaration
4. Future5. References
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1 Introduction
Vision• Open access will contribute to better scientific
communication. Main problem:
• Lack of institutional policies. Agents
• Authors: according to SOAP report, 90% are pro-OA.• University managers: they don’t know a lot about OA.• Librarians:
- Have been major proponents of the movement, have created repositories, etc.
- But are limited due to lack of political power within their institutions (universities, research centers, etc.).
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1 Introduction (ii)
What can librarians do?• Advocacy, create a lobby• Promote
How?• Working in cooperation.
At what level?• National (through library consortia)• Regional (Southern European countries)
- They share some features of library management and scholarly communication.
- Precedent: Nordic countries
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2 The action
Who?• SELL• National delegations (France, Greece, Italy, Portugal,
Spain, Turkey) Where?
• Granada (2010) What goal?
• Create a network• Contribute to promoting policies in each country
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SELL (Southern European Libraries Link)
SELL (http://www.heal-link.gr/SELL)• ANKOS (Turkey) • Heal-Link (Greece)• CIBER, CILEA, CASPUR (Italy)• CBUC, CSIC (Spain)• Couperin (France)• b-on (Portugal)
Actions• Exchange of information• Statements and common positions• One multiconsortia license (ALPSP)• Open access iniciative
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2.1 Steps
Design of the action• SELL board.
Preparation of national reports (2009-2010)• France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Turkey.
Discussion (Granada, 2010)• Consensus methodology.• Alhambra Declaration.
Publication: • Open access in Southern European countries (2010)
- National reports- Global conclusions- Alhambra Declaration
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Fig. 1. National delegates (Granada, 2010)
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Fig. 2. The report
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Authors
France: Francis André, Rachel Creppy, Emile Barthet, Jean-François Lutz, Mariette Naud, Anne-Marie Badolato, Jean-François Nominé, Christine Weil-Miko
Greece: Panos Georgiou, Fiori Papadatou Italy: Paola Gargiulo, Maria Cassella Portugal: Ricardo Saraiva, Eloy Rodrigues Spain: Ernest Abadal, Lluís Anglada, Remedios
Melero, Francisca Abad, Miquel Térmens, Josep-Manuel Rodríguez-Gairín
Turkey: Ata Turkfidani, Aynur Moral, Gultekin Gurdal
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3 Results
Structure of each report• Journals• Repositories• Policies
Common data• Ulrich’s• DOAJ• Scopus, JCR• Juliet, Roarmap, Melibea• National directories
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Fig. 3. Directories
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3.1 Journals
Total numbers• 7,248 titles. • 9% of world total.• Italy, France and Spain at the top (90% of the titles).
Digital• 39% (on average).• Turkey, at the top (75%).
Open access• 10% (on average).• Turkey (31% of titles), Portugal (24%), at the top.
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3.1 Journals (ii)
Impact• 5% in JCR, 15% in Scopus (important differences
between countries).• France, at the top.
Language• Significant presence of their own languages in journals.• France, Italy, Spain and Portugal (over 75% of titles).
Subject• Predominance of publications in Social Sciences and
the Humanities. Publishers
• Low proportion of commercial publishers.
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3.2 Repositories
Total number• 223 in DOAR and 225 in ROAR.• 10 % of the world total.• Spain at the top (30%).
Model• Centralised: France, Portugal.• Descentralised.
Harvesters in each country• Pleiadi, HAL, Recolecta, RCAAP, Greek digital libraries,
MITOS.
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Fig. 4. Harvesters
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3.3 Policies
In general, “bottom-up” actions. Berlin Declaration
• Italy: all universities have signed.• Turkey: no institutions have signed.
Mandates• Univ. Minho, the oldest mandate (2005).• Universities: Spain at the top.• Government
- Spanish Law Science and Technology (approved 12/05/2011).
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Spanish Law of Science, Technology and Innovation
Research personnel whose research activity is financed mainly by national public funding will make available a digital version of the final version of the contents that have been accepted for publication in scholarly journals, as soon as possible, but in no case longer than 12 months after the official date of publication.
The electronic version is to be made available in open access repositories recognised by the subject field in which the research was carried out or in OA institutional repositories.
The digital version made available publicly can be used by the Public Administration in its evaluation processes.
The Ministry of Science and Innovation will facilitate centralized access to repositories and connection to similar national and international initiatives.
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3.4 Alhambra Declaration - Lines
Implementing policies for fostering Open Access to scientific information.
Enhancing advocacy initiatives to promote Open Access among researchers, policy makers, etc.
Building sustainable alternative business models for publishing.
Assuring quality of Open Access publications. Fostering repositories.
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3.4 Alhambra Declaration – Action plan
Dissemination• Disseminate the “Alhambra Declaration”.• Publish the national reports in a single document with
recommendations.• Translate the “Alhambra declaration” and the seminar
document. Task force and national plans
• Creating national task forces for Open Access (based on seminar national delegations and including representatives of all the agents).
• International coordination of the national task forces in harmony with related European projects.
• Creating national plans and road maps for the next three years.
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4 Future
There is a space for working on OA at the supranational level.
Goal:• Select best practices of each country and try to apply
them to the rest. Continuation in an European funded project.
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5 References
Abadal, Ernest; Melero, Remedios; Abad, Maria Francisca; Villarroya, Anna (2009). “Políticas institucionales para el fomento del acceso abierto: tipología y buenas prácticas”, Bollettino AIB, v. 49, n. 2, p. 159-170. (http://eprints.rclis.org/16825/ )
Furnival, Ariadne Chloe (2010) Open access to scholarly communications: advantages, policy and advocacy. (http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/1419/2/OpenAccess-Advantages-Policies-Advocacy.pdf)
Ghosh, Maitrayee (2011). “Advocacy for open access: a selected review of the literature and resource list”. Library Hi Tech, no. 2
Hedlund, Turid; Rabow, Ingegerd (2007). Open access in the Nordic Countries: a state of the art report. Nordbib. (http://www.nordbib.net/Initiatives---Reports/Reports/OA-in-the-Nordic-countries.aspx).
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5 References (ii)
Open access in Southern European countries (2010). Lluís Anglada, Ernest Abadal (eds). Madrid: FECYT.
Pinfield, Stephen (2010). "Paying for open access? Institutional funding streams and OA publication charges". Learned Publishing, vol. 23, no 1.
SOAP Study of Open Access Publishing (2011). Report from the SOAP Symposium [2011: Berlin]. SOAP Study of Open Access Publishing. <http://project-soap.eu/report-from-the-soap-symposium/>.
Suber, Peter (2007). “What you can do to promote open access”. (http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/do.htm#administrators).
Suber, Peter (2009). “Open access policy options for funding agencies and universities”. SPARC Open Access Newsletter, no. 130. (http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/02-02-09.htm)
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Thanks