From: "Tom Grady (Staff)" <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2024 10:24:39 +0000

(apologies for any cross-posting)



With the new year beginning, the *Opening the Future*
<https://www.openingthefuture.net/> (OtF) team at Copim felt the time was
right to provide a little round up of 2023, and a look at what 2024 will
hold.


*Books published through OtF, new members joining, and a milestone*

   - Both of our participating publishers, CEU Press
   <https://ceup.openingthefuture.net/forthcoming/> and Liverpool
   University Press <https://lup.openingthefuture.net/forthcoming/>,
   published several new OA books in 2023, entirely funded by the OtF
   membership scheme. LUP were able to publish OA frontlist books
   contributing to their Hispanic and Lusophone studies collections, while CEU
   Press’ 2023 new frontlist titles expanded their offerings on the
   historical, political and cultural context to the Russia-Ukraine war,
   Eastern European political history, and genocide studies. CEU Press also
   reached a landmark *tenth publication *funded this way
   <https://ceup.openingthefuture.net/news/111/>. 2024 promises to be a
   busy year at both publishers, with many more fully funded titles
   forthcoming between them. We thank the participating libraries for enabling
   this with their support.
   - The number of OtF member libraries in the UK, Europe, Australia and US
   also grew in 2023, and CEU Press are now contacting early adopting members
   to encourage them to renew their membership for another 3 years. As each
   member comes to the end of their 3 year membership they retain perpetual
   access to their subscribed package, so to give libraries greater choice and
   relevant titles for their collection, CEU Press created a *new
   subscription package* (available to current and new subscribers) called East
   Meets West <https://ceup.openingthefuture.net/packages/11/>, which
   provides a highly relevant perspective on modern Russian imperialism and
   its 20th century history. Liverpool University Press will be looking to
   renew their earliest members too, a little later this year.



*OtF news*

   - OtF hosted several webinars on equitable and sustainable OA book
   funding, including one with Project MUSE
   <https://copim.pubpub.org/pub/5t35zs1t/release/1> that had 300+
   international attendees. We also presented the model and hosted discussion
   on sustainable funding for OA monographs at the Jisc UKRI Monograph Series
   of webinars, a National Acquisitions Group (UK) seminar in May, and a
   workshop at the Norwegian Munin Conference on Scholarly Publishing in
   November. Contact us if there’s a burning topic you’d like us to consider
   running a session about with our network.
   - UK library members in particular may be pleased to learn that our
   collective model is eligible for UKRI funding under the terms of their
   new policy guidance
   <https://www.ukri.org/manage-your-award/publishing-your-research-findings/open-access-funding-and-reporting/>.
   We look forward to hearing more from UKRI on the details and continue to
   collaborate with our colleagues at Copim to understand how it’ll work in
   practice
   <https://copim.pubpub.org/pub/copim-response-to-ukri-funding-mechanism-for-diamond-open-access-book-models/release/1>
   .



*Expanding Participation*

   - One of our chief aims in 2024 is to *expand our publisher
   participation*, while continuing to work closely with our current
   publishing partners. If you have any recommendations of small/medium sized
   scholarly presses anywhere in the world that are interested in trialling
   our collective funding model, please get in touch with us at
   [log in to unmask] We’re also always looking to expand
   library participation and help Liverpool UP and CEU Press open up more
   scholarship to a global audience, so please check out
   openingthefuture.net <https://www.openingthefuture.net/> if you want to
   know more about how your library can increase its own local collection with
   relevant titles, while simultaneously funding new OA frontlist titles.



Once again, we’d like to thank everyone who has contributed to, or taken an
interest in OtF in 2023, and hope you will continue to support us in 2024
as we scale up and contribute to and help steer the developing OA book
funding landscape.


*Leveraging the collective contributions of academic libraries worldwide,
OtF funds presses to publish new OA monographs, while libraries
simultaneously benefit from access to closed content, and no single
institution bears a disproportionate burden. For a modest annual fee
libraries get DRM-free, unlimited access to a closed-access selection of
the press' backlist, with perpetual access after three years. The press
then uses the membership revenue solely to produce new OA monographs,
moving towards an affordable, sustainable model for academic publishing and
creating a collection of OA books that are open for the world. More info: *
openingthefuture.net <https://www.openingthefuture.net/>





-----

Tom Grady

Work Package Lead

*Opening the Future* with Work Package 3 @ COPIM Open Book Futures project

Birkbeck, University of London

Twitter: @ScholTom <https://twitter.com/ScholTom>  |  COPIM on Twitter:
@COPIMproject <https://twitter.com/COPIMproject>  |  COPIM blog
<https://copim.pubpub.org/opening-the-future>