After a long-running consultation, the UK鈥檚 main research funder has unveiled its open access policy, 鈥渋n pursuit of a very simple thing, which is that publicly funded research should be made publicly available鈥.
Few will disagree with the words of Sir Duncan Wingham, UK Research and Innovation鈥檚 open access champion 鈥 but, inevitably, when it comes to the details of its implementation, opinions on the policy are strongly held and difficult to bridge.
In simple terms, the policy mandates that journal articles based on scholarship that UKRI funds should be made freely available at the point of publication from April 2022, with a similar requirement 鈥 albeit with the option of a 12-month embargo 鈥 applying to monographs from January 2024.
It allows authors to choose between the 鈥済old鈥 open access route, where articles are made freely available by journals in exchange for the payment of a processing charge, and the 鈥済reen鈥 model, under which authors lodge a free-to-read 鈥渁ccepted manuscript鈥 in a depository at the point that a paper or monograph is published behind a paywall.
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And it comes with the promise of an additional 拢46.7 million per annum from UKRI to cover processing charges and support implementation of the new rules, of which 拢3.5 million will be ring-fenced for books.
In many ways, the proposals on monographs, book chapters and edited collections have been the most controversial element of the policy, with arts and humanities scholars having raised concerns about whether sufficient funding will be available to cover the processing charges associated with open-access publishing, as well as the impact on smaller publishers.
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There are fears that academic careers could be hindered if insufficient funds for book publishing are available, with previous estimates having suggested that it might cost more than 拢19 million annually to cover typical book processing charges.
Sarah Kember, director of Goldsmiths Press, said that providing only 拢3.5 million for books out of a budget more than 10 times that was a 鈥渃lear indicator of the funding bias鈥 towards the sciences and article publishing, 鈥渄espite calls, during the review process, for more support for arts, humanities and social sciences鈥.
Paul Ayris, chief executive of UCL Press, the UK鈥檚 first fully open-access university press, said that he felt the ring-fencing of 拢3.5 million was actually a 鈥渟trong signal鈥 of support for the free-to-read monograph community. However, he warned that the funding must not 鈥渂ecome a green light for publishers to charge as much as they possibly can. The UKRI funding is there to enable the transition to happen more smoothly, not to make as much money as possible.鈥
UKRI鈥檚 Sir Duncan, chief executive of the Natural Environment Research Council, said that the funder had looked at the number of monographs arising each year from UKRI funding when making a judgement about the level of support to provide for open-access publishing.
鈥淭he number of monographs arising from UKRI funding is a small proportion of the total published every year,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not going to underwrite the cost of all monographs but聽[we will] underwrite the open access cost of monographs that arise from our funding.鈥
The new policy recognises that 鈥渢here may be rare instances where meeting open access requirements for long-form publications may not be possible鈥 and allows for a number of exceptions, including for trade books. The decision about whether a book falls into the trade category 鈥渋s at the discretion of the author and publisher鈥.聽
Beyond funding, the key question on monographs is whether the infrastructure exists to deliver a shift towards open-access publishing on the scale intended. Professor Ayris, also pro vice-provost (library services) at UCL, said that while he was 鈥渁bsolutely enthusiastic鈥 about the direction of the policy and the pace of change, there were questions about whether the existing infrastructure would be 鈥渁ble to deliver a fully national open-access monograph approach鈥.
鈥淲e need to make sure that the infrastructure is there that there are enough publishers, like UCL Press, who are able to deliver the volume of publishing in monographs that鈥檚 needed,鈥 he said.
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Samuel Moore, a scholarly communication specialist and researcher at Cambridge University Library, said it would be 鈥渧ital that the block grant can be used to support pure open-access book publishers, not just those transitioning to an open model鈥.
鈥淥pen-access books have been pioneered by scholar-led publishers and university presses, most of whom do not charge book processing fees, and so these publishers need to be able to access the block grant to support their not-for-profit activities,鈥 he said.
鈥淐reating a fund that could conceivably be spent on book processing charges is likely to stimulate a market in this area, which would be a disastrous outcome and would lead to further commercialisation of an area that would be best served by close partnership between universities and small, not-for-profit scholarly presses.鈥
The division between bigger and smaller publishers has been a key issue on journal articles too, with major publishers criticising the embrace of green open access. Underlying this concern may be a fear that, by providing two routes to open-access publication, it will be harder for big firms to persuade research institutions to 鈥渇lip鈥 existing sector-wide subscriptions to their journals to big deals of a similar value, based on the payment of article processing charges (APCs).
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Steven Inchcoombe, chief publishing officer at Springer Nature, said that the policy had created some 鈥渦nintended consequences that needed to be addressed鈥.
He said that gold open access was the 鈥渙nly long-term solution that meets researchers鈥 needs鈥, and the basis on which publishers had accepted that they needed to shift their business models towards open access.
鈥淧roviding, as an option, access to an incomplete version which can only be funded by maintaining the current subscription models will lessen the incentives for publishers to add value prior to a paper being accepted, where they currently invest heavily,鈥澛燤r Inchcoombe said.聽
Having green as an equal option聽was 鈥渘ot good enough. The only way to open science is if the version of record with all its added value is made openly and freely available,鈥 he continued.
Springer Nature, which publishes prestigious titles including Nature itself, faces particular challenges under the policy, which restricts funding of聽APCs to journals聽that are fully open access or part of a 鈥渢ransitional agreement鈥 under which they are moving towards full open access.
Hybrid journals, which collect subscriptions as well as accepting payment for open-access papers, will be excluded, meaning that publication in titles such as Nature would be out of the question for UKRI-funded research.
Mr Inchcoombe said he was 鈥渉opeful鈥 that a solution could still be found, arguing that many researchers still wanted to publish their research in prestigious and widely read periodicals such as Nature.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got to try together to look at the evidence. It鈥檚 not about what publishers think, or what funders think; it鈥檚 about what鈥檚 best for the research system,鈥 he said.
Sir Duncan told 探花视频 that the policy sought to balance affordability for research institutions with sustainability for the publishing industry, while still giving authors a choice of publishing venues.
鈥淭his won鈥檛 all happen overnight, and it won鈥檛 happen without an effort from everybody to make it happen. Publishers, institutions and individual authors will need to adapt to our policy. All of us actually now have a responsibility to try and make this work for us,鈥 Sir Duncan said.
For Cambridge鈥檚 Dr Moore, the need for change went beyond just the publishing industry, arguing that 鈥渁 truly equitable open access landscape depends on significant changes to research evaluation, and I look forward to seeing how UKRI ties the policy to this broader desire for culture change鈥.
鈥淲ithout this, we鈥檒l see the big publishers continue to hoover up public money for [article processing charges], allowing a handful of multinational publishers to carry on dominating scholarly communication,鈥 he said.
Meanwhile, UCL鈥檚 Dr Ayris said that the onus was on publishers to accept the direction of travel on open access.
鈥淭hey are nervous about change, I understand that, but I would encourage them to be more positive and more outward-looking and think about the benefits that this policy will bring,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is a momentous change.鈥
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anna.mckie@timeshighereducation.com
厂辞耻谤肠别:听Getty

UKRI open access policy: in brief
Journal articles
- From April 2022, must be published in an open-access journal or, if published in a subscription journal, an author鈥檚 accepted manuscript must be placed in a free-to-read repository at the time of publication
- Must be available under a creative commons attribution licence (CC BY), or other licence permitted by UKRI
- No embargoes allowed on release of open-access version
- Use of funds for publishing in a 鈥渉ybrid鈥 journal that is not part of a transitional agreement towards full open access is not permitted.
Monographs, book chapters and edited collections
- From January 2024, free-to-read version must be available to read and download via an online platform or repository within a maximum of 12 months of publication
- Must be available under a creative commons attribution licence (CC BY), or other licence permitted by UKRI
- Exemptions apply 鈥渨here the only appropriate publisher, after liaison and consideration, is unable to offer an open access option that complies with UKRI鈥檚 policy鈥; where the publication is the result of a training grant; or where permission for the reuse of third-party materials cannot be obtained
- Trade books are also exempt, and the decision about whether a title falls into this category 鈥渋s at the discretion of the author and publisher鈥.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽A sea change in scholarly communication?
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