From: Office for Scholarly Communication <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Wed, Oct 24, 2018 at 10:30 AM


<https://officeforscholarlycommunicationharvardlibrary.cmail20.com/t/t-l-oodkik-juihdlkrh-r/>

October 24, 2018
Harvard's Individual Open-Access License *Harvard Releases an Individual
Open-Access License for Non-Faculty Scholars*The Harvard Library Office for
Scholarly Communication
<https://officeforscholarlycommunicationharvardlibrary.cmail20.com/t/t-l-oodkik-juihdlkrh-y/>
is
pleased to announce the launch of a new open-access license for all Harvard
authors of scholarly articles.

All Harvard schools have open-access policies
<https://officeforscholarlycommunicationharvardlibrary.cmail20.com/t/t-l-oodkik-juihdlkrh-j/>
granting
certain non-exclusive rights to the University. These policies were adopted
by faculty votes, and allow Harvard to make scholarly articles by faculty
freely available to the world through DASH
<https://officeforscholarlycommunicationharvardlibrary.cmail20.com/t/t-l-oodkik-juihdlkrh-t/>(Digital
Access to Scholarship at Harvard), Harvard’s open-access repository.

The new Individual Open-Access License (IOAL) gives Harvard’s non-faculty
researchers the same benefits that the faculty policies give faculty. Under
the voluntary IOAL, non-faculty authors grant to Harvard the same
non-exclusive rights that faculty grant to Harvard under the school-level
policies, and Harvard grants the same non-exclusive rights back to the
authors. As a result, authors signing the IOAL will have more rights to
reuse their own work than they receive under standard or even progressive
publishing contracts.

The IOAL is available to all non-faculty scholars at Harvard, such as
administrators, librarians, staffers, fellows, post-docs, and students.
It’s completely voluntary. For those who sign it, it clears the path to
open access without the need to negotiate with the publisher, for example,
to obtain permission or modify the contract.

The IOAL does not give Harvard “ownership” of these works. Authors retain
ownership or copyright to keep or transfer as they wish. The IOAL gives
Harvard no exclusive rights, just non-exclusive rights – for example to
make covered works publicly available through DASH.

By design, the IOAL takes precedence over later publisher agreements, just
like the faculty policies. Hence, authors who sign the IOAL before
submitting a future work to a publisher will receive this bundle of rights
without regard to the terms of their publishing contract, unless they
choose to opt out of the license for that article. The IOAL does not apply
retroactively.

The IOAL is a key step for Harvard staff and students who want to open
their scholarly articles, and share them on the web, reuse them in
publications, conferences, teaching, or other purposes. Learn more in the
Office for Scholarly Communication FAQ entry on the IOAL
<https://officeforscholarlycommunicationharvardlibrary.cmail20.com/t/t-l-oodkik-juihdlkrh-i/>
.


Office for Scholarly Communication
Widener Library G-20
Harvard Yard
Cambridge, MA 02138

Phone: (617) 495-4089
Email: [log in to unmask]