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Publishing arm aims to disseminate research and ease budgetary pressures
Nobel laureate Randy Schekman has pledged to stop publishing in “luxury journals”, which he believes contribute to the “disfigurement” of science.
Adequate funding has been allotted for universities to meet the cost of open access, the government has maintained
Review rejects MPs’ criticisms of gaps in its data
‘Resurrecting the Book’ conference hears support for printed word
A formal body should be set up to coordinate efforts to implement open access, the Finch Group has recommended.
UK researchers should be permitted to publish in top international journals even if those journals are not compliant with open-access mandates.
Edinburgh University Press has bought Dundee University Press for an undisclosed sum.
Committee points to ‘gaps in qualitative and quantitative evidence’ for Finch report recommendations
A preference for gold open access over green is misguided and is due to multiple gaps in the evidence gathered for the Finch Report, MPs have said.
Advantages to making research freely available are still limited when publication is via gold journals
Half of scientific papers published in 2011 can be accessed online for free, a new study has suggested.
In a significant victory for data miners, the open access publisher BioMed Central is to waive all copyright over datasets it publishes.
Fresh light on how academic libraries in low- and medium-income economies are contributing to universities has been shed in a new report.
The UK funding councils have narrowed the scope of their proposed open access mandate for the post-2014 research excellence framework.
A library-focused effort aims to take monographs off the analogue shelf
Academics invited to publish papers, solicit reviews on new scholarly site
Michael Billig on the weaknesses of a discipline’s usage
The number of journals denied an impact factor for taking part in citation cartels has risen sharply this year, pushing up the total number of excluded journals.
Universities deciding mechanisms to apportion RCUK cash
Open access is a utopian pipe dream, says Richard Hoyle
Science ministers from the G8 group of the world’s richest countries have jointly endorsed the need to increase access to publicly-funded research.
Transition is both desirable and inevitable, Gabriel Egan argues
Hundreds of people have signed a petition protesting about new quarterly journal Porn Studies that is due to launch in spring next year.
A variety of schemes would allow the academy to reclaim control of its knowledge and labour, says Steffen Böhm
Getting image permissions for monographs is costly, slow and vexing
Adrian Furnham has had his share of peer review nightmares, but the frailties of the system have also worked in his favour
The publisher Elsevier has disassociated itself from an article by a trade association it belongs to that condemns proposed open-access mandates in several US states.
The government would like to see more publishers take up schemes that waive open access publishing fees for researchers from universities that subscribe to its journals, a senior civil servant has said.
Essex scholar raises fears over peer review integrity
A bill to reform the libel system in England and Wales is set to become law after completing its passage through the Houses of Parliament.
We must hold up a mirror to scientific peer review if we are to stamp out fraud and uphold the discipline’s reputation, argues Philip Moriarty
Exceptions in the UK funding councils’ open access policy will be made for researchers hired from abroad, the Higher Education Funding Council for England’s head of research has pledged.
The founders of Mendeley have insisted that selling the company to the controversial academic publisher Elsevier will result only in “good things”
Research Councils UK has removed from its guidance on its open-access policy an exhortation for institutions and authors to make sure a “proper market in article fees” operates.
In a further sign of the growing scientific prominence of data sets, Nature Publishing Group has launched a new open-access platform that will peer review and publish detailed descriptions of their contents.
Publication ethics committee issues new guidelines for peer review
Episciences Project offers new publishing formula
Universities should vet research outputs before they get to the publishing (and scandal) stage, say Roger Watson and Mark Hayter
Senior humanities and social science academics come out in support of move to ‘take knowledge out of silos’
Open-access terminology needs to be employed accurately, argues Cameron Neylon
Christopher Higgins details academy’s cost burden to Booksellers Association conference
Revised open-access guidance leaves unanswered questions
A disastrous open-access policy lashes the promise of the digital age to an outmoded buggy of a model, laments Martin McQuillan
Longer embargo periods of up to 24 months for green open access will only apply when universities’ annual block grants for “gold” article fees have run out, Research Councils UK has confirmed.
They say ‘lessons have been learned’ after Research Councils UK is condemned for lack of dialogue
A series of high-profile research scandals within social psychology have led to unjustified attacks on the whole academic discipline. Wolfgang Stroebe and Miles Hewstone declare that the majority must not suffer for a tiny minority’s misconduct
The UK’s higher education funding councils will not express a preference for either green or gold open access in their submission rules for future research excellence frameworks.
The UK’s higher education funding councils will not express a preference for either green or gold open access in their submission rules for future research excellence frameworks.
The lack of clarity over Research Councils UK’s new open access policy is “unacceptable” and government ministers should learn lessons from the confusion, according to a House of Lords report.
‘Summer reading lists’ no basis for policy, says don
Open-access publishing, once a niche preoccupation, is now a hot-button issue. But concern is growing that unintended consequences of new publication mandates will cost individual scholars and the UK sector dear. Paul Jump reports
Swiss poo paper comes up smelling of roses
Policy continues to worry academics despite research councils’ concession
RCUK has announced it will not enforce its stated embargo periods for green open access during the first five years of its new open-access policy.
David Edmonds contrasts Edmund Gettier’s three-page 1963 masterpiece with the endless outflow induced by the emetic REF