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IMPROVING ACCESS TO ACADEMIC CONTENT : JISC working for UK teaching and research

IMPROVING ACCESS TO ACADEMIC CONTENT : JISC working for UK teaching and research. Frederick J. Friend OSI Open Access Advocate JISC Consultant Honorary Director Scholarly Communication UCL f.friend@ucl.ac.uk. JISC STRATEGY TO IMPROVE ACCESS TO ACADEMIC CONTENT.

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IMPROVING ACCESS TO ACADEMIC CONTENT : JISC working for UK teaching and research

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  1. IMPROVING ACCESS TO ACADEMIC CONTENT : JISC working for UK teaching and research Frederick J. Friend OSI Open Access Advocate JISC Consultant Honorary Director Scholarly Communication UCL f.friend@ucl.ac.uk

  2. JISC STRATEGY TO IMPROVE ACCESS TO ACADEMIC CONTENT • JISC is the Joint Information Systems Committee of the four Higher Education Funding Councils in the UK and also has a responsibility for networked services to the Further Education Colleges • JISC Strategy includes “improving the effectiveness of scholarly communication” • This involves implementing cost-effective improvements in access to academic content for learners and researchers in colleges and universities • One route to cost-effective improvements in access through negotiation of “big deals” – Pilot Site Licence Initiative 1996-99, NESLI 1999-2002, NESLi2 2002- • This route partially effective but many difficulties – e.g. long negotiations, small publishers not included, many universities and colleges unable to buy in • Push for Open Access coming from both JISC Journals Working Group and JISC Scholarly Communication Group

  3. JISC SUPPORT FOR OPEN ACCESS REPOSITORIES • For three years JISC has been supporting the development of repositories through the Focus on Access to Information Resources (FAIR) Programme • FAIR Programme has contributed to developing the mechanisms and supporting services to allow the submission and sharing of content generated by the Higher Education and Further Education communities • Fourteen projects, including SHERPA and RoMEO • The FAIR Programme is part of a larger area of work being taken forward by the JISC. The JISC envisages the Information Environment as a place where members of the HE and FE community can place and share useful content. • Next stage in that work is the new Repositories Programme

  4. JISC SUPPORT FOR OPEN ACCESS PUBLISHING • For two years JISC has been supporting the development of open access journals • Many discussions with publishers led to programme of transition-funding from subscription to open access • GB£150K made available for each of three years : four publishers awarded grants in first year, five in second year • Alternative model : national deal with BioMed Central renewed for second year following successful first year – high use by UK authors and quality maintained

  5. JISC OPEN ACCESS STUDIES AND SURVEYS • Open access is new territory and we need to explore and learn • “JISC/OSI Journal Authors Survey” carried out by Key Perspectives Ltd 2004 http://www.jisc.ac.uk/uploaded_documents/JISCOAreport1.pdf • New KPL survey on self-archiving will be published by JISC • Four new studies : guide to scholarly publishing trends, learned society open access business models, disciplinary differences and needs, open access citation information

  6. JISC current / future activities • Repositories call • GNU Eprints software • Sherpa-DP and Preserv • DOAR • Digital Asset Management and Preservation • Involvement with Wellcome Euro/UK PMC • Shared Services • Digital Curation Centre • Standards work / UKOLN

  7. Repositories call Studies • Thematic, open call Repositories • Workflow, organisational, political issues • Technical issues, standards Services • Pilot services Town meeting Wednesday in London

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