TY - ABST
T1 - Open Access Monitor - DK
T2 - Concluding Conference and Executive Summary
AU - Svendsen, Michael
AU - Rosenkrantz Hansen, Claus
AU - Dorte, Andersen
N1 - The programme and executive summary has been produced on behalf of all Danish University Libraries being involved in the 2-year DEFF-funded project Open Access Monitor - DK: Collection, documentation and administration of Open Access publication costs in Denmark.
The concluding conference will be taking place at the Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen, Lecture Hall (Aud. A 1-01.01) on December 6 from 9:30-15:00.
The participating institutions would like to thank DEFF: Denmarks Electronic Research Library for its financial support.
PY - 2018/11/26
Y1 - 2018/11/26
N2 - The project highlights the results of monitoring the publishing ecology of Open Access and the scale of the financial resources being spent on Open Access publishing by Danish universities with a parallel look-out to similar efforts in the UK, Sweden and Norway.
In a changing landscape of new Open Access modes, Denmark has adopted a so-called “green” strategy, according to which publication must be kept largely free of charge and publications must be archived in institutional repositories.
Even so, Danish universities spend significant financial resources on Open Access publishing. Substantial fees are being paid to publish via the “golden route” in born-open journals, but also in subscription-based journals via the hybrid model. The latter is especially interesting considering the practice of double-dipping, where universities not only pay for the right-to-read (via the national e-license portfolios) but also for the right-to-publish (via publication fees).
This raises the question of the scale of resources spent on Open Access publishing by Danish universities. This DEFF project follows similar efforts in the UK, Sweden, Norway, Germany and the Netherlands, monitoring how much is being spent on golden and hybrid publishing by Danish universities. The approach has been to identify the publishing ecology of Open Access and derived financial costs. Since it is difficult to gather invoice data, an economic model has been developed to estimate the total cost of publication at Danish universities.
Results show that expenses related to Open Access publishing in the Danish universities are increasing substantially and that monitoring efforts are required.
The OAM-DK project has produced an executive summary ahead of the final OAM-DK report summarizing 10 targeted results and recommendations.
Full report will be available December 21
Read more about the project here: bit.ly/oam-dk
Programme folder & executive summary layout, credit: @ Rasmus Rindom Riise
AB - The project highlights the results of monitoring the publishing ecology of Open Access and the scale of the financial resources being spent on Open Access publishing by Danish universities with a parallel look-out to similar efforts in the UK, Sweden and Norway.
In a changing landscape of new Open Access modes, Denmark has adopted a so-called “green” strategy, according to which publication must be kept largely free of charge and publications must be archived in institutional repositories.
Even so, Danish universities spend significant financial resources on Open Access publishing. Substantial fees are being paid to publish via the “golden route” in born-open journals, but also in subscription-based journals via the hybrid model. The latter is especially interesting considering the practice of double-dipping, where universities not only pay for the right-to-read (via the national e-license portfolios) but also for the right-to-publish (via publication fees).
This raises the question of the scale of resources spent on Open Access publishing by Danish universities. This DEFF project follows similar efforts in the UK, Sweden, Norway, Germany and the Netherlands, monitoring how much is being spent on golden and hybrid publishing by Danish universities. The approach has been to identify the publishing ecology of Open Access and derived financial costs. Since it is difficult to gather invoice data, an economic model has been developed to estimate the total cost of publication at Danish universities.
Results show that expenses related to Open Access publishing in the Danish universities are increasing substantially and that monitoring efforts are required.
The OAM-DK project has produced an executive summary ahead of the final OAM-DK report summarizing 10 targeted results and recommendations.
Full report will be available December 21
Read more about the project here: bit.ly/oam-dk
Programme folder & executive summary layout, credit: @ Rasmus Rindom Riise
KW - Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences
KW - Open Access
KW - Publicering
KW - Monitorering
KW - APC
KW - Estimation
KW - Universiteter
KW - Økonomi
U2 - 10.5281/zenodo.1544953
DO - 10.5281/zenodo.1544953
M3 - Conference abstract for conference
ER -