Dear list,
I'm happy to let you know that Knowledge Exchange (KE) has published the article Monitoring agreements with Open Access elements: why article level metadata is important.
If you are interested in monitoring OA publications and monitoring cost data for OA publications at a national or institutional level or by funder this may be an interesting article for you to read.
The Knowledge Exchange (KE) Monitoring Open Access (OA) task and finish group has undertaken research on agreements with OA elements (e.g. agreements with APC discounts, offsetting agreements, read and publish agreements) set between consortia from KE countries and major publishers between 2016 and early 2019. Following recommendations from KE and ESAC it assessed agreements with OA elements to investigate what article-level metadata consortia request from publishers and what metadata publishers deliver to consortia.
With Plan S research funders requiring a full transition to OA by 2021, the delivery of article-level metadata becomes critical to monitor publishers’ compliance with Plan S requirements for transformative arrangements.
The research findings showed that:
The research findings can be used as a benchmark to monitor how major publishers were performing in KE countries until early 2019 and prior to Plan S comes into effect in 2021.
You can read the full article here: https://insights.uksg.org/articles/10.1629/uksg.489/ and find out more about Knowledge Exchange's work on Monitoring Open Access here: http://www.knowledge-exchange.info/event/oa-monitoring
We hope the article will give new insights and facilitate collective action. Please help us distributing our work and share it widely through your channels!
With best regards,
Juliane Kant
The Knowledge Exchange (KE)
partners are six key national organizations within Europe tasked with developing infrastructure and services to enable the use of digital technologies to improve higher education and research: CSC in
Finland, CNRS in
France, DAFSHE in
Denmark , DFG in
Germany, Jisc in
the UK and SURF in
the Netherlands.