University of California Faculty Senate Passes Open Access Policy
http://senate.universityofcalifornia.edu/

Contact:

Professor Christopher Kelty, UCLA
(310) 880-2433; [email protected]

Professor Richard Schneider, UC San Francisco
415-305-7992; [email protected]

Professor Robert Powell, Chair, Academic Council
510-987-0711; [email protected]

The Academic Senate of the University of California has passed an Open
Access Policy, ensuring that future research articles authored by faculty
at all 10 campuses of UC will be made available to the public at no charge.
“The Academic Council’s adoption of this policy on July 24, 2013, came
after a six-year process culminating in two years of formal review and
revision,” said Robert Powell, chair of the Academic Council. “Council’s
intent is to make these articles widely—and freely— available in order to
advance research everywhere.”  Articles will be available to the public
without charge via eScholarship (UC’s open access repository) in tandem
with their publication in scholarly journals.  Open access benefits
researchers, educational institutions, businesses, research funders and the
public by accelerating the pace of research, discovery and innovation and
contributing to the mission of advancing knowledge and encouraging new
ideas and services.

Chris Kelty, Associate Professor of Information Studies, UCLA, and chair of
the UC University Committee on Library and Scholarly Communication
(UCOLASC), explains, “This policy will cover more faculty and more research
than ever before, and it sends a powerful message that faculty want open
access and they want it on terms that benefit the public and the future of
research.”

The policy covers more than 8,000 UC faculty at all 10 campuses of the
University of California, and as many as 40,000 publications a year.  It
follows more than 175 other universities who have adopted similar so-called
“green” open access policies.  By granting a license to the University of
California prior to any contractual arrangement with publishers, faculty
members can now make their research widely and publicly available, re-use
it for various purposes, or modify it for future research publications.
 Previously, publishers had sole control of the distribution of these
articles.  All research publications covered by the policy will continue to
be subjected to rigorous peer review; they will still appear in the most
prestigious journals across all fields; and they will continue to meet UC’s
standards of high quality.  Learn more about the policy and its
implementation here: http://osc.universityofcalifornia.edu/openaccesspolicy/
UC is the largest public research university in the world and its faculty
members receive roughly 8% of all research funding in the U.S.  With this
policy UC Faculty make a commitment to the public accessibility of
research, especially, but not only, research paid for with public funding
by the people of California and the United States.  This initiative is in
line with the recently announced White House Office of Science and
Technology Policy (OSTP) directive requiring “each Federal Agency with over
$100 million in annual conduct of research and development expenditures to
develop a plan to support increased public access to results of the
research funded by the Federal Government.” The new UC Policy also follows
a similar policy passed in 2012 by the Academic Senate at the University of
California, San Francisco, which is a health sciences campus.

"The UC Systemwide adoption of an Open Access (OA) Policy represents a
major leap forward for the global OA movement and a well-deserved return to
taxpayers who will now finally be able to see first-hand the published
byproducts of their deeply appreciated investments in research” said
Richard A. Schneider, Professor, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and
chair of the Committee on Library and Scholarly Communication at UCSF.
“The ten UC campuses generate around 2-3% of all the peer-reviewed articles
published in the world every year, and this policy will make many of those
articles freely  available to anyone who is interested anywhere, whether
they are colleagues, students, or members of the general public"

The adoption of this policy across the UC system also signals to scholarly
publishers that open access, in terms defined by faculty and not by
publishers, must be part of any future scholarly publishing system.  The
faculty remains committed to working with publishers to transform the
publishing landscape in ways that are sustainable and beneficial to both
the University and the public.

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