Abstract

Universities in developing countries have rarely been able to subscribe to academic journals in the past. The “Online Access to Research in the Environment” initiative (OARE) provides institutions in developing countries with free online access to more than 11,500 environmental science journals. We analyze the effect of OARE on (1) scientific output and (2) scientific input as a measure of accessibility in five developing countries. We apply difference-in-difference-in-differences estimation using a balanced panel with 249,000 observations derived from 36,202 journal articles published by authors affiliated with 2,490 research institutions. Our approach allows us to explore effects across scientific fields, i.e. OARE vs. non-OARE fields, within institutions and before and after OARE registration. Variation in online access to scientific literature is exogenous at the level of scientific fields. We provide evidence for a positive marginal effect of online access via OARE on publication output by 29.6% with confidence interval (18.5%, 40.6%) using the most conservative specification. This adds up to 2.07 additional articles due to the OARE program for an average institution publishing 7.0 articles over the observation period. Moreover, we find that OARE membership eases the access to scientific content for researchers in developing countries, leading to an increase in the number of references by 8.4% with confidence interval (5.6%, 11.2%) and the number of OARE references by 14.5% with confidence interval (7.5%, 21.5%). Our results suggest that productive institutions benefit more from OARE and that the least productive institutions barely benefit from registration.

Highlights

  • While global online access has laid the groundwork for involving all nation-states in science, universities in developing countries have rarely been able to subscribe to academic journals in the past (Annan, 2004)

  • We focus our analysis on the five developing countries that are most active in terms of both publishing and registration with the online access to environmental (OARE) initiative: Kenya, Nigeria (SubSaharan Africa) and Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru (South America)

  • We provide empirical support for a positive marginal OARE effect that ranges between +48% and +57%

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Summary

Introduction

While global online access has laid the groundwork for involving all nation-states in science, universities in developing countries have rarely been able to subscribe to academic journals in the past (Annan, 2004). The Online Access to Research in the Environment (OARE) initiative seeks to provide free or reduced-fee online access for researchers of registered institutions in the field of environmental science. It was launched by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Yale University in October 2006. Registered research institutions in Group A countries (gross national income (GNI) per capita below $1,600) receive free online access to all journals that are available under the OARE initiative whereas institutions in Group B countries (GNI per capita below $5,000) receive access for a reduced fee of $1,000 per year. The underlying idea is that only researchers working on environmental issues can be impacted by free or reduced-fee online access to OARE journals after an institution has registered with OARE.

Related literature
Data and proceedings
Methodology and Variables
Empirical Analysis
Conclusion
Summary statistics for Group A countries
Findings
Summary statistics for Group B countries mean sd min max
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