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A Happy Open Access New Year!
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu, ssp@lists.sspnet.org
- Subject: A Happy Open Access New Year!
- From: Heather Morrison <heatherm@eln.bc.ca>
- Date: Tue, 18 Dec 2007 18:01:26 EST
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
*excuse cross postings*
The latest edition of my Dramatic Growth of Open Access and Predictions for 2008 has been posted, at: http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2007/12/dramatic-growth-of-open- access.html
In brief, open access growth continues very strong in any area examined (number of fully open access journals, number of repositories, number of items in repositories).
While growth continues at a dramatic pace, it is important to recognize that there are already very substantial numbers of open access resources.
The Directory of Open Access Journals lists more than 3,000 journals. This is more journals than one will find in even the largest of the "big deals". It is also more non-embargoed, current, fulltext, peer-reviewed content than is found in even the largest of aggregated packages. The 3,000 journals in DOAJ may already be 15% of the world's estimated 20-25,000 peer-reviewed scholarly journals. If we have not yet reached 15%, it is almost certain that this will happen in 2008.
Scientific Commons, just one of the repository search engines, includes more than 17 million items from over 7 million authors. OpenDOAR, a vetted list of open access repositories, lists more than 1,000 repositories as of November 2007.
The growth rate for the Canadian Association of Research Libraries' institutional repositories, as measured by a CARL Metadata Harvester search, was greater in the (incomplete) final quarter of 2007, than in all of 2006.
My conclusion is that open access has now reached a point of significant capacity, and momentum. Each one of the journals listed in DOAJ has an editorial infrastructure, willing authors and reviewers, and no doubt many could scale. Traditional publishers are experimenting with open access in a variety of ways. Libraries and publishers are trying new approaches to supporting publishing in an open access environment. The SCOAP3 Consortium, which seeks to find a means to fund full open access publishing for high energy physics, is the initiative to watch in 2008, in my opinion.
A Happy Open Access New Year to all.
Any opinion expressed in this e-mail is that of the author alone, and does not represent the opinion or policy of BC Electronic Library Network or Simon Fraser University Library.
Heather Morrison, MLIS
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com
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