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UKRI-funded research to be published in open access journals
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Luxembourg and Frontiers strike national Open Access publishing agreement
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Chercheurs et agriculteurs luxembourgeois : au boulot !
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By Rebecca Trager2021-05-28T08:30:00+01:00
The drumbeat of calls for scientific publishers to become less restrictive and allow the authors of research papers to more freely disseminate and reuse their findings is growing louder. In a new joint statement, 880 European universities, research organisations and science funders are urging publishers to allow researchers to deposit their accepted manuscripts in a repository with an open licence.
Members of the European University Association (EUA), Science Europe and CESAER – a non-profit association of leading science and technology universities of in Europe – note in their statement that scholarly publishers still typically demand authors sign exclusive publishing agreements that include re-use restrictions and embargoes on depositing them in open access repositories.
Research lobbies lock horns with science publishers over open access 25 May 2021 | News
Universities and research institutes urge science publishers to stop imposing embargoes on manuscripts funded by agencies that make open access a condition of public grants
Rik Van de Walle, president of CESAER. Photo: Ghent University
Nearly 900 universities, research organisations, and funding agencies want science publishers to be more transparent and abide by open access rules, after scientists complained their submissions are rejected if they apply a public copyright licence to accepted manuscripts.
In a joint statement published today, research-performing and research-funding organisations represented by the European University Association, Science Europe and CESAER, call on all publishers to stop requiring researchers to sign over their rights and to end the use of restrictions and embargoes.