I'd like to mention that some funding agencies and initiatives which have 
already launched some interesting initiatives which fund OA books or are 
prepared to do it in the future:



OAPEN: http://www.oapen.org/home

Austrian Science Fund (FWF): 
http://www.fwf.ac.at/en/projects/stand_alone_publications.html

German Research Fundation (DFG): 
http://www.dfg.de/foerderung/info_wissenschaft/info_wissenschaft_12_53/index.html

A Consortium Approach to OA Monographs in Sweden: 
http://www.ep.liu.se/aboutliep/pdf/progress_report_oa_monopraphs.pdf





Best,

Falk



__________________________________________________
Falk Reckling, PhD
Social Science and Humanities / Strategic Analysis / Open Access
Head of Units
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Sensengasse 1
A-1090 Vienna
email: falk.reckl...@fwf.ac.at<mailto:falk.reckl...@fwf.ac.at>
Tel.: +43-1-5056740-8301
Mobil: + 43-699-19010147
Web: http://www.fwf.ac.at/de/contact/personen/reckling_falk.html
________________________________
Von: goal-boun...@eprints.org [goal-boun...@eprints.org]" im Auftrag von 
"Jean-Claude Guédon [jean.claude.gue...@umontreal.ca]
Gesendet: Freitag, 18. Jänner 2013 15:19
An: goal@eprints.org
Cc: SPARC Open Access Forum
Betreff: [GOAL] Re: Statement: Australian Open Access Support Group applauds 
new ARC open access policy

The issue of books has always been a difficult terrain within the OA community. 
A narrow interpretation of Open Access tends to limit its reach to journal 
articles, and this choice has the obvious advantage of leaving the issue of 
royalties aside. However, it should be remembered that scholars who write 
scholarly monographs or contribute to scholarly anthologies do not generally do 
it for money, but for the same kind of goals that scholars do when they publish 
in articles. Consequently, drawing a red line around the royalty issue is 
really a moot point in the great majority of case and can be justified only on 
the ground of wanting to simplify matters to the extreme. At the same time, it 
must be remembered that books and even anthologies carry more weight in most 
SSH (social science and humanities) areas. leaving them aside would be like 
telling scientists that, for whatever reason, publishing in the most 
prestigious journals cannot be taken into account. And citation trackers, until 
very recently, have also systematically neglected books despite their obvious 
importance.

Now, let us look at the issues of books with regard to the ARC policy.

Books do not have “less developed mechanisms for open access copyright 
clearance than journal articles”. They have better developed mechanisms for 
copyright transfer, and greater justification for closed access.  There is no 
simple parallel between scholarly book publishing and scholarly journal 
publishing. The industries are very different, and convergence is slow in 
coming though we may be starting on that path.

I believe this statement to be very poorly written. In this I agree with 
Arthur. But I am not sure that they have greater justification for closed 
access. And I do not understand why scholarly book publishing and scholarly 
journal publishing are so vastly different. Book publishing in general, yes; 
but scholarly book publishing works about the same way as journal publishing 
(with the minor difference of insignificant royalties). If there are so many 
justifications for closed access to books, why are some academic presses 
practising open access? Are they crazy? Unrealistic? Whatever?

If the ARC policy extends to books, and according to the AOASG statement also 
to ibooks and ebooks, and to a lesser extent but still importantly book 
contributions (chapters), then it is easy to predict:

1.     Very few books will be published as the outcomes of a research project. 
Book publishers incur real costs (editorial, printing, stock and distribution), 
especially research or review books, and require closed access to recover costs 
over much longer timeframes than articles. They will simply refuse to publish 
books that are to be made open access, unless heavily subsidized.

2.     Very few ibooks will be published as outcomes of a research project. 
Although the iTunes policy is that free ibooks (ie open access) are accepted, 
most people wanting to publish a research output as an ibook (.iba format for 
iPad) will want to recover some of their development cost. This will be less 
significant in the less interactive .pub format.


1. It is true that book publishers incur real costs, but so do journal 
publishers, especially when they maintain a paper version, as is still the case 
in a majority of SSH journals. Then, even printing, stock and distribution 
issues are shared by both worlds.

The life cycle of scholarly books (and articles within anthologies) may or may 
not be longer than those of journal articles: it all depends on the discipline, 
and the best proof of this is JSTOR which is a success. But Arthur is not 
really speaking about life cyles of articles; he is speaking about cost 
recovery of journals and articles. Actually, given the present price of many 
scholarly books - anyone looking at catalogues from Sage or similar publishers 
can confirm this point - few individuals buy them, which means that the 
scholarly book market depends on library demand as heavily as scholarly 
journals.

Finally, in many countries (e.g. Canada, France, Italy, etc.), scholarly books 
are heavily subsidized to the point that, for these books, publishers really 
face a risk-free world. And not so long ago, most US university presses were in 
a position to work at a loss, which means that their books were subsidized 
locally. In fact, ever since Johns Hopkins U. Presss was founded, university 
presses original mandate was to publish books that could not succeed 
commercially but were important for the growth of knowledge.

2. Arthur makes a prediction that does not appear substantiated. If university 
presses that already practise OA decide to produce eBooks (why limit oneself to 
iBooks?), they will simply decrease many of their production, storage and 
distribution costs, and this will help them financially in their effort to 
promote book OA.

One has to doubt whether the ARC intends such undesirable consequences, and if 
it has thought this through. I just mention newspaper articles, video 
recordings, music scores, film and play scripts, photographs, architectural 
designs, computer programs, patents, and silicon chip designs, without going 
into detail.

I will not speculate on whether ARC has thought the issue through or not, but 
it is true that scholarly publishing will eventually move across the whole 
gamut of document types one can imagine, plus the data behind it. However, a 
scholarly video will maintain with a commercial video the same kind of 
relationship that a scholarly book maintains with a novel or a cookbook: 
although superfically alike, they enter entirely different economic circuits 
and should, therefore, be treated accordingly. Conflating all kinds of codices 
into one lump does not help thinking through the digital mutation we are 
experiencing. In fact, if we pushed the argument further, we could say that 
because scientists use writing in their work, it should be treated like any 
other form of writing, from a laundry bill to a D. Steele novel. Moving down 
that road will quickly lead us into absurdities.

In conclusion, I am not saying that the ARC policy is perfect; but I am saying 
that policy formulations that do include scholarly books and anthologies make a 
lot of sense if one is interested in thinking about Open Access as an important 
tool for the great conversation of knowledge, be it in the STM disciplines, or 
in SSH. And, once and for all, let us forget about this artificial red line 
dealing with the royalty issue. In fact, all subsidized, scholarly, books 
should exclude the possibility of royalties.

Incidentally, mandates for depositing research publications into 
institutional/central/thematic repositories should clearly extend to SSH 
publications in whatever form, codex, journals, etc..

Best,

Jean-Claude Guédon

Le vendredi 18 janvier 2013 à 00:41 -0500, Stevan Harnad a écrit :
Many thanks to Arthur Sale for posting this. When I saw these (obvious) howlers 
in the ARC Policy I assumed the policy-makers (or the policy-writers) had 
fallen asleep at the wheel (and I gave up).


Let's hope that Arthur's firm and confident corrective will be noticed and 
heeded.


The ARC gaffe is nothing compared to the UK's Finch/RCUK gaffe, which was done 
-- and has since been defended -- with eyes wide shut...


Stevan Harnad

On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 6:00 PM, Arthur Sale 
<a...@ozemail.com.au<mailto:a...@ozemail.com.au>> wrote:
Danny



I believe this AOASG statement contains an error. It states that the ARC policy 
applies to all research outputs of an ARC project, including books. While this 
can be inferred from the text, it is an extraordinary claim which will be 
ineffective and cannot have been intended by the ARC.



Books do not have “less developed mechanisms for open access copyright 
clearance than journal articles”. They have better developed mechanisms for 
copyright transfer, and greater justification for closed access.  There is no 
simple parallel between scholarly book publishing and scholarly journal 
publishing. The industries are very different, and convergence is slow in 
coming though we may be starting on that path.



If the ARC policy extends to books, and according to the AOASG statement also 
to ibooks and ebooks, and to a lesser extent but still importantly book 
contributions (chapters), then it is easy to predict:

1.     Very few books will be published as the outcomes of a research project. 
Book publishers incur real costs (editorial, printing, stock and distribution), 
especially research or review books, and require closed access to recover costs 
over much longer timeframes than articles. They will simply refuse to publish 
books that are to be made open access, unless heavily subsidized.

2.     Very few ibooks will be published as outcomes of a research project. 
Although the iTunes policy is that free ibooks (ie open access) are accepted, 
most people wanting to publish a research output as an ibook (.iba format for 
iPad) will want to recover some of their development cost. This will be less 
significant in the less interactive .pub format.

One has to doubt whether the ARC intends such undesirable consequences, and if 
it has thought this through. I just mention newspaper articles, video 
recordings, music scores, film and play scripts, photographs, architectural 
designs, computer programs, patents, and silicon chip designs, without going 
into detail.



The statement that “The AOASG particularly commends the ARC for requiring 
publications to be made available through institutional repositories” is also 
incorrect, or rather overstated.  The ARC policy makes it clear that deposit in 
a repository is not necessary, if the research output is already available 
elsewhere on the Internet in an open access form (for example in a subject 
repository, on a website, in iTunes, in an open access journal, or as an OA 
article in a hybrid journal). The policy does not mandate open access journals 
and similar routes (good), but it does not inhibit their natural growth either 
(also good). It sets institutional repositories as the OA mechanism of ultimate 
resort, and as a compulsory location for a metadata record and a pointer to an 
OA full-text.



One could improve on the ARC policy, of course, in order to improve global 
discoverability and shorten the excessive embargo delay. The guidelines that 
will back up the policy will be especially valuable, as these will be more 
influential on grant recipients than reading between the lines. Just imagine 
the effect if the policy had stated:

“the ARC requires that any article publications arising from an ARC supported 
research project must be open access and globally discoverable within a six (6) 
month period from the date of publication. Discoverability of the full-text of 
the publication through Google Scholar is regarded as proof of meeting this 
requirement.”

Arthur Sale

University of Tasmania



From: goal-boun...@eprints.org<mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org> 
[mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org<mailto:goal-boun...@eprints.org>] On Behalf Of 
Danny Kingsley
Sent: Monday, 14 January 2013 7:38 AM
To: goal@eprints.org<mailto:goal@eprints.org>; 
cai...@googlegroups.com<mailto:cai...@googlegroups.com>; 
ao...@mailman.anu.edu.au<mailto:ao...@mailman.anu.edu.au>
Subject: [GOAL] Statement: Australian Open Access Support Group applauds new 
ARC open access policy





STATEMENT
Australian Open Access Support Group applauds new ARC open access policy


The Australian Open Access Support Group (AOASG) applauds the Australian 
Research Council (ARC) in their implementation of a new open access policy.



The ARC posted their open access policy on their website on Monday 7 January. 
The ARC Open Access Policy http://www.arc.gov.au/applicants/open_access.htm 
states:

the ARC requires that any publications arising from an ARC supported research 
project must be deposited into an open access institutional repository within a 
twelve (12) month period from the date of publication.



The AOASG particularly commends the ARC for requiring publications to be made 
available through institutional repositories. This method of making work open 
access uses the substantial institutional repository network in place across 
Australian institutions. It also avoids the potentially costly result of a 
mandate that requires publication in open access journals through the payment 
of article processing charges.



This policy differs from the “NHMRC revised policy on the dissemination of 
research findings” 
http://www.nhmrc.gov.au/grants/policy/dissemination-research-findings 
(introduced on 1 July 2012) in two important ways.



1.     Unlike the NHMRC policy which only relates to journal articles resulting 
from funded research, the ARC policy will apply to all publication outputs 
resulting from funded research. This will include books and book chapters which 
currently have less developed mechanisms for open access copyright clearance 
than journal articles.



2.     The NHMRC policy took effect from 1 July 2012, and all journal articles 
from any funded research (regardless of the grant under which it was funded) 
published after that date are required to be submitted within 12 months of 
publication to an institutional repository. The ARC policy is not 
retrospective, and relates specifically to publications resulting from the 
Funding Rules and Agreements released after 1 January 2013. This means there 
will be a period of some time between the funding allocation and publication of 
the work. This longer implementation period presents an opportunity to address 
some of the issues facing researchers who publish in outlets other than journal 
articles.



The AOASG is a consortium of six Australian universities which supports 
Australian institutions and researchers by providing information about, and 
support for, the development and implementation of open access policies. The 
particular issues facing the humanities and social sciences in the open access 
debate will be an early focus for the Group.



Still in early implementation phase, the AOASG will have a web presence 
available shortly.





Dated: 14 January 2013




Further information:
Dr Danny Kingsley, Executive Officer AOASG

e: danny.kings...@anu.edu.au<mailto:danny.kings...@anu.edu.au> p: 02 6125 6839

Australian National University, Charles Sturt University, Macquarie University, 
Newcastle University, Queensland University of Technology and Victoria 
University



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--

[X]

Jean-Claude Guédon
Professeur titulaire
Littérature comparée
Université de Montréal



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