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Year-End Investments Towards Open Access



With the EU Petition for Guaranteed Public Access to Publicly-Funded Research topping 20,000 signatories (more than 1,000 institutional), and the historic Belgian signing of the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities, no doubt many libraries are giving some thought to the transition to open access.

For those with a little year-end funding, here are some suggestions on investments to help prepare for an OA future:

Purchase a LOCKSS box. Those open access journals your faculty are developing or publishing will need to be preserved, as will your local open access repository. So do your subscription resources and access to them, for that matter.

Buy a server and hardware for those locally produced journals and/or your open access archive.

Invest in open access resources, such as the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. This is a particularly interesting model for year-end funding; the idea is to build an endowment fund for perpetual open access, with funding commitments designed to be roughly equivalent to three years of subscriptions to an encyclopedia of this nature.

Host a workshop on open access publishing and/or self-archiving.

For more details, please see my blogpost on The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics, at: http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2007/02/year-end-investments- towards-open-acces.html

Heather Morrison, M.L.I.S.
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com