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Hybrid open access journal options



One of the remarkable advances in open access over the summer is the announcement by a number of publishers (BMC, Wiley, Cambridge, American Physical Society, American Chemical Society, Blackwell). This is wonderful news! For libraries wondering whether to provide support to such options, it might be a good idea to examine carefully exactly what it is one would be paying for.

Peter Suber covers the topic in some detail in the September 2006 Open Access Newsletter article, Nine Questions for Hybrid Open Access Journal Programs: http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/09-02-06.htm#hybrid

Here are the nine questions, but please see the full article for full
explanation:

(1) Does the journal let participating authors retain copyright?
(2) Does the journal use an OA-friendly license, like those from
Creative Commons? Does it let authors do so?
(3) Does the journal automatically deposit participating articles in
an OA repository independent of the publisher? Does it allow
the author to do so?
(4) Does the journal waive fees in cases of economic hardship?
(5) Does the journal promise to reduce the subscription price in
proportion to author uptake?
(6) If authors have a prior obligation to their funding agency to
provide OA to their peer-reviewed manuscript, does the
journal let them comply without choosing the new OA option
and paying the associated fee?
(7) If the journal previously allowed author self-archiving without
an embargo, does it still allow it for authors who do not
choose the new OA option?
(8) For participating authors, do the OA publication fees cover page
and color charges or are the latter laid on top of the
former?
(9) Is the fee high or low?

For librarians advising faculty on best options for authors wishing to provide open access, or who need to provide OA to satisfy requirements of funders, it may be useful to look at a combination of these variables. For example, if one journal has a hybrid option with a high fee, no author copyright, and no immediate self-archiving option, the author might be better off with a journal with no hybrid option at all, but which allows immediate self-archiving.

When considering the use of library funds to subsidize such payments, I would add to 5) (does the journal promise to reduce the subscription price) - the question, does the journal promise to reduce the subscription price for your library or consortium? Some of the hybrid options offer lower prices for subscribing libraries; others make rather vague promises about lower prices for everyone; and some make no mention of lowering any prices for anyone at all.

Heather Morrison
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com