The United Kingdom continues to lead the world in Open Access:
University College London (UCL) has
just adopted the UK's 22nd (and the world's
84th) mandate to make all of its research output Open Access (by depositing it in UCL's Institutional Repository,
UCL Eprints).
With its
13 funder mandates and 9 institutional/departmental mandates so far, the UK still has the planet's highest proportion of Open Access Mandates.
But the world is catching up (see
Figure)!
Dr. Alma Swan of
Key Perspectives and University of Southampton has just documented how
mandates to provide Open Access to research output have almost doubled globally in the year that has elapsed since Harvard University's Faculty of Arts and Sciences adopted the
world’s 44th Open Access mandate in May 2008.
The
world's first Open Access mandate was adopted in 2002 by the University of Southampton's School of Electronics and Computer Science (ECS). Southampton had previously designed, in
2000, the first free, Open Source software for creating Open Access Institutional Repositories,
Eprints, now used the
world over.
In 2004 the UK Parliamentary Select Committee on Science and Technology (as urged by
evidence provided by Southampton University and Loughborough University)
recommended “
that all UK higher education institutions establish institutional repositories on which their published output can be stored and from which it can be read, free of charge, online [and] that Research Councils and other Government funders mandate their funded researchers to deposit a copy of all of their articles in this way.”
Research Councils UK went on in 2006-2008 to make a clean sweep, with all seven councils mandating Open Access in 2006-2008.
But Alma Swan's analysis shows that the UK is at last going to lose its lead, as the global growth spurt of OA mandates we had all been awaiting appears to have begun, at long last.
The globalization of Green OA Self-Archiving Mandates is of course something that all UK universities heartily welcome as a win/win outcome, optimal and inevitable for research and researchers worldwide. Open access is essentially reciprocal. The only way every university on the planet can gain open access to the research output of every other university on the planet is by each providing open access to its own research output: "
Self-archive unto others as you would have them self-archive unto you.”
So Kudos to UCL and to Gaia: Many happy
returns!
FIGURE: Accelerating Growth Rate in Worldwide Adoptions of Green Open Access Self-Archiving Mandates (2002-2009, in half-year increments) by Research Funders, Institutions, and Departments/Faculties/Schools (Swan 2009)