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Open Choice Success Clauses?
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Open Choice Success Clauses?
- From: Heather Morrison <heatherm@eln.bc.ca>
- Date: Thu, 6 Jul 2006 19:09:03 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
A number of publishers are now offering "open choice", optional open access on payment of a fee in a subscription-based journal (Oxford, Blackwell, Springer, Elsevier, PNAS). With funding agencies either requiring or strongly encouraging open access (several of the RCUK bodies, Wellcome Trust, NIH, potentially FRPAA, Australian universities, and many other policies either in effect or in the works - perhaps librarians might want to begin thinking about the economic implications should this approach be somewhat successful, creating a new revenue stream for publishers. Some of the publishers (Oxford, Springer) are promising to reduce subscription fees based on open choice revenue. (If there are more publishers with such plans, my apologies for any omissions, I would appreciate being corrected). It seems to me to be prudent for libraries to begin looking for some kind of "open choice success" clauses in their licenses, especially for multi-year agreements. Perhaps some of the publishers have already put such clauses in place? The idea would be, rather than agreeing to the usual sort of pricing over a 3-year period, for example, libraries and publishers would have the opportunity to periodicially evaluate subscription fees, based on open choice revenue - perhaps, once a year. Without such a clause, libraries - especially those with long-term agreements - could end up paying much more than they really should, if a significant proportion of the articles ends up being paid for through open choice (not to mention if whole journals included in a subscription bundle move to open access using processing fees). It seems to me that libraries which coordinate processing fee payments for open access, regardless of where the revenues for these comes from (funding agencies, departmental funds, library budgets, combinations), are in the very best position to negotiate subscription reductions for open choice payments - they are the ones who will know exactly how much revenue is going to which publishers, from their institutions. For that matter, it is the library which coordinates these fees which is in a very good position to say to a publisher - look, we've paid for this whole year via subscription, plus x for optional processing fees. Let's just deduct that processing fees from next year's subscription costs. Considering how many publishers have come out with "open choice" in the near past, and OA policy developments underway, it might be a good idea to look for a standard clause, whether the publisher currently has an "open choice" option or not. After all, how many publishers had these three years ago? Could this approach, along with more straightforward payment of OA processing fees, be the means for a gradual transition from subscription-based payment to open access processing fee payments, be one of the keys to a smooth transition from subscriptions to open access? Please note, this is not intended as an endorsement of either the open choice or processing fee approaches, only two of a number of business models for open access. Let's not forget that less than half of OA journals charge processing fees. thoughts? Heather G. Morrison http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com
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