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Research outputs that are Open Access (OA) are freely available online and lack the licensing and copyright restrictions common in traditional publishing models. While physicists have been making preprints of their research freely available online since 1991, the Budapest Open Access Initiative (2002) and Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities (2003) brought together an international community of advocates and defined the movement. As of October 2024, the Berlin Declaration has nearly 800 signatories from around the globe.
The OA movement was initially a response to two major changes in scholarly communication:
As the OA movement has gained momentum, funders, governments, and universities have created policies supporting universal access to research, especially taxpayer-funded research (learn more about US federal public access mandate here). See the OpenAccess@OSU tab for more information about the OSU Faculty Open Access Policy and ScholarsArchive@OSU, Oregon State's institutional repository.
OSU Libraries provides support for open access journal publishing and a variety of digital publishing projects:
Slideshow about OJS@OregonDigital
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Visit our Digital Publishing page for examples of open book publishing and online exhibits.
Internationally and here in the US, a growing number of institutions are signing on to the concept of Open Access through OA Policies or Mandates which state that their researchers will make use of a local institutional repository to preserve their scholarly writings.
In June 2013, the OSU faculty passed an open access policy that requires the deposit of articles to the ScholarsArchive@OSU open access institutional repository. For help with faculty deposits, consult the ScholarsArchive User guide
The past decade has seen a steep increase in the number of open access journals. Fewer than half charge article processing charges (APCs), or author open access fees. Some are distributed by traditional publishers such as Springer Nature, Wiley, and Elsevier. Other credible publishers are fully open, like PLOS and PeerJ. Oregon State University faculty and students have their costs covered for publication in PeerJ. Unfortunately, there has been a parallel rise in predatory publishers accompanying the increase in open access journals.
Journals may have different levels of openness, as shown by the graphic below from SPARC [click on the image to be taken to a version where you can zoom in].
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