Dear GKD Members,

This surely needs a close look and support from all who believe in the
value of sharing knowledge. - FN

------------------------------------------------
INDIA's MARCH TOWARDS OPEN ACCESS

Subbiah Arunachalam
Source: SciDev.Net

+----------------------------------------------
Subbiah Arunachalam argues that the best way to make scientific research
more available worldwide is to encourage scientists to self-archive
their research.
+----------------------------------------------+

In December 2003, the Indian National Science Academy (INSA) held a
one-day conference on access to scientific data and information as part
of its annual meeting in Pune. The conference was held to address two
key problems faced by Indian scientists -- poor access to international
journals and the low visibility of papers published by Indian scientists
-- and the possible solutions offered by electronic publishing and open
archives.

Inaugurating the conference, Raghunath A. Mashelkar, director-general
of India's Council of Scientific & Industrial Research, spoke of how
international organisations such as the World Health Organisation (WHO)
and the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) were helping developing
countries improve electronic access to expensive journals through the
HINARI and AGORA programmes, respectively.

Unfortunately, however, India has not benefited from either of these
programmes. Although journal publishers are willing to provide toll-free
electronic access to researchers in countries where relatively few
scientists read their journals, they are not prepared to do so in larger
developing countries such as India, where they already have a
considerable number of subscribers. Yet India's average gross domestic
product (GDP) is, per capita, less than half the threshold agreed upon
by the WHO and FAO when they set up the HINARI and AGORA programmes.


A RADICAL RESPONSE

So scientists in such countries need to find a more radical response by
harnessing the new opportunities provided by information and
communication technologies (ICTs). We need to break away from the
existing model of publishing and communicating scientific knowledge. One
way of doing this is to embrace the 'open-access' approach being
promoted by the Budapest Open Access Initiative with its two
complementary strategies of setting up interoperable open archives and
promoting open-access journals.

Several Indian publishers have already adopted the open-access
philosophy for the electronic versions of their journals. Unlike some
open-access journals in other countries, in which authors pay to publish
their papers, Indian open-access journals use government grants and
subscriptions to their print version to cover publishing costs.

All 10 journals of the Indian Academy of Sciences, for example, as well
as the four journals of INSA, are open-access journals. In fact, INSA
has already produced free-access electronic versions of back volumes for
all its journals, and the Indian Academy of Sciences is also attempting
a similar 'retro-digitisation'.

The Journal of the Indian Institute of Science is also available in this
form back to its very first issue, published in 1914. The Indian Medlars
Centre of the National Informatics Centre, New Delhi, is bringing out
electronic versions of 22 biomedical journals, all of them accessible
without subscription. The Medlars Centre also has an online
bibliographic database, www.indmed.nic.in, providing titles and
abstracts of articles from 77 Indian biomedical journals.

Medknow Publications, a small company based in Mumbai, has helped 10
medical journals -- including the Journal of Post Graduate Medicine and
Neurology India -- make the transition from print to electronic open
access and all of them are doing much better now than before.

In addition, some Indian open-access journals are using international
agencies such as Bioline, a not-for-profit electronic publishing service
for developing countries, and JournalServer.org, an online library of
academic journals, to gain greater visibility.

However, open-access publishing needs to be complemented by setting up
interoperable institutional archives, which allow researchers to make
versions of their articles publicly available online both before and
after publication.

An additional attraction of such archives is that they would raise the
profile of Indian research. At present, research originating in an
Indian laboratory and published in expensive journals all too often goes
unnoticed, even by other researchers in India. Creating institutional
archives of such work would help to integrate it into the global
knowledge base, to reduce the isolation of our scientists and to improve
opportunities for funding and international collaboration.

The clear advantages offered by institutional archiving over the present
publishing system, in which many research papers are held in the back
issues of journals controlled by commercial (and some society)
publishers in other countries, suggests that the government should have
an interest in ensuring its success.  India's University Grants
Commission, for example, should insist that major universities with a
large output of science and technology papers set up institutional
archives.

Other funding agencies -- such as the Department of Science &
Technology, Department of Scientific & Industrial Research, Department
of Biotechnology, Department of Atomic Energy, Department of Space,
Indian Council of Agricultural Research and Indian Council of Medical
Research -- should also insist that research papers resulting from work
supported by their funds be made available through open-access archives
and toll-free journals.

India is not the only country being drawn towards open access.

In China - for example, among officials of the National Natural Science
Foundation and the Institute of Scientific and Technical Information in
China, as well as researchers with the Chinese Academy of Sciences --
there is already significant interest in its benefits to the country's
scientists.

Reflecting this interest, in mid-June 2004 China will hold a major
national conference on open access in cooperation with the US National
Academy of Sciences. And in the last week of June, the Eighth
International Conference on Electronic Publishing will take place in
Brasilia.

The first phase of the World Summit on the Information Society, held
last December, has given a considerable boost to these efforts: the WSIS
Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action include strong statements
in favour of open access to scientific literature. UN secretary-general
Kofi Annan has also offered his support.


NURTURING THE NETWORK

International action is one thing, but genuine free access is another.

It will need a champion (or champions) in every institution to promote
the creation of institutional archives, and persuade scientists to place
their papers in them.

Free access also requires adequate hardware and connectivity. Many
universities and research institutions in the developing world lack both
computers and high bandwidth Internet connectivity, so part of the
strategy of open-access proponents must include campaigning for improved
ICT facilities. Luckily, costs of both hardware and Internet bandwidth
are coming down all over the world.

Another important hurdle to overcome is the fact that many scientists
labour under the impression that journal editors may not accept archived
papers, claiming that this represents an unacceptable form of
'pre-publication'.

These scientists worry that it will be difficult to assess the impact of
their research if it isn't published in conventional journals. After
all, they argue, promotions and awards are often determined by the
impact factor of the journals in which one's work is published. Many are
also unaware of the advantages of gaining greater visibility and are
reluctant to make the effort to post their articles on archives.

Just over a year ago, for example, the National Centre for Science
Information (NCSI) at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), the
country's best-known higher education institution in science and
technology, set up an institutional archive. The institute publishes
about 1,800 papers a year, of which about 900 are indexed in the Web of
Science, which gives access to the world's most prestigious, high impact
research journals.

Yet so far, the archive has attracted less than 70 papers. This
experience emphasises an important point: it is not enough just to
create an open-access archive. Filling it is far more important (and
difficult). After all, an empty archive is worse than having no archive
at all.

But attitudes of the journals are changing, making institutional
archiving a more attractive proposition. It is important for champions
of open access to let scientists know that many journals, including
high-impact titles such as Nature and the British Medical Journal,
already permit authors to archive both preprints and postprints. The
emphasis should therefore be on setting up open archives rather than on
persuading journal publishers to make their journals open access.

If scientists and scientific establishments in China, India and Brazil
can be persuaded to adopt open access quickly, then it is likely that
the rest of the developing world will follow.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
This article is courtesy Scidev.net. Check out the new South Asia
section of this website, focussing on science and development issues.
-FN

FORWARDED VIA:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frederick Noronha (FN)                    Nr Convent Saligao 403511 GoaIndia
Freelance Journalist                      P: 832-2409490 M: 9822122436
http://www.livejournal.com/users/goalinks http://fn.swiki.net
http://www.ryze.com/go/fredericknoronha   http://fn-floss.notlong.com
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Difficulties to send email across? Write to fredericknoronha at vsnl.net
============================================================================
                        Please avoid sending me Word or PowerPoint
                        attachments See
                    http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html


------------
***GKD is solely supported by EDC, a Non-Profit Organization***
To post a message, send it to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To subscribe or unsubscribe, send a message to:
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. In the 1st line of the message type:
subscribe gkd OR type: unsubscribe gkd
Archives of previous GKD messages can be found at:
<http://www.edc.org/GLG/gkd/>

Reply via email to