Barbara Kirsop, Leslie Chan, Subbiah Arunachalam, Secretary and Trustees 
Electronic Publishing Trust for Development, UK 
------------------------------------------------ 
Dear All,
As the time for our discussion draws to a close we would like to register our 
thanks to UNDP for providing this facility. We imagine that there will be an 
analysis of contributions and a summary of the discussions, which will be valuable 
to us all.
However, as an organisation working to promote equality of access to published 
refereed research both to and from the science communities in the developing world, 
we would also like to register our disappointment on two counts:
1. It is disappointing that there have been only 7 contributions so far from the 
developing world (with the notable exception of our colleague, Subbiah Arunachalam), 
and 3 of these were from India. Is this because few people in the less advantaged 
countries are aware of the forum, or is it because they are not yet in the OA loop?
2. It is also very disappointing that in spite of our efforts to distinguish 
between OA Publishing and OA Archiving right at the start of this debate (see 
message 
http://groups.undp.org/read/messages?id=97277), misunderstandings still 
exist - as Steven Harnad's recent message clearly shows 
http://groups.undp.org/read/messages?id=97112
We would like to support once more Stevan's reminder that OA is not OA Publishing 
(OAP), but OA Archiving (OAA) too, and that OAA is affordable and do-able by all 
institutes straight away. The acceptance of this fact will have incalculable 
benefits to us all, but especially to the poorest nations. Fortunately, this is 
now becoming understood by governments and policy makers, as the UK S and T Select 
Committee report and the US NIH statements are now recommending or requiring that 
publicly funded research is archived in institutional archives (see 
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmsctech/399/39903.htm and the US 
http://www.taxpayeraccess.org/congress.html).
Academic communities in poorer countries can take advantage of servers anywhere in 
the world offering OAA services, without the need to set up their own independent 
servers straight away. This way they get immediate visibility for their own 
research output. As an example, the Bioline eprints server 
http://bioline.utsc.utoronto.ca now holds two thousands papers from developing 
countries and all articles are searchable through Google, OAIster and many other 
search engines. All of the 220 other archives listed in the Directory of 
Institutional Archives 
http://archives.eprints.org/eprints.php? all are 
interoperable.
We ask that UNDP and its sister UN organisations urgently consider how OAA can 
very quickly and at minimal cost change the science opportunities for those 
currently disenfranchised. Global participation could take place without further 
delay. The international agencies can make a strong commitment to support the 
establishment of OAAs (that close both the N to S, S to N and S to S information 
gaps). Their help is needed to raise awareness of OAA for both policy-makers and 
the research communities. At the same time, workshops can be supported at key 
institutes in the different regions to provide the technical assistance to help ^
institutes set up their own archives. A start has been made in India, Brazil and 
China, but it is clear that much more needs to be done.
As the two messages highlighted above explain, OAA changes nothing else (neither 
current publishing nor refereeing practices), but immediately opens the door to 
equality of access.
Barbara Kirsop, Leslie Chan, Subbiah Arunachalam
Secretary and Trustees of the Electronic Publishing Trust for Development
http://www.epublishingtrust.org
--- 
20 September- 4 October 2004: gpgNet Forum on "Open Access to Scholarly 
Publications: A Model for Enhanced Knowledge Management?" Co-hosted with the 
Open Society Institute (OSI). 
Read background paper to the discussion at 
http://www.gpgnet.net/topic08.php 
View messages posted to this forum at 
http://groups.undp.org/read/?forum=gpgnet-oa 
To post your comments on the issue, send them to: gpgnet-oa_at_groups.undp.org 
Received on Thu Sep 30 2004 - 13:07:28 BST