Abstract

See video of the presentation.During its first two years of operation SCOAP3 funded some 8,000 articles via the transformation of ten existing High-Energy Physics journals into Gold Open Access at no costs for authors. SCOAP3, the Sponsoring Consortium for Open Access Publishing in Particle Physics started in January 2014 after several years of preparation. The initiative is a collaboration of some 3,000 libraries, research institutions and funding agencies from 45 countries and IGOs and is hosted at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. Alexander Kohls, the Operations Manager of SCOAP3 will present a review of the first two years of SCOAP3. The specific business model of the initiative ensures a central management of relations with the publishers, and efficient and easy to administer APC payment process and article compliance validation using a dedicated global repository. The presentation will show how SCOAP3 performed in terms of operational efforts, APCs and benefits for the scientific community. The compliance of publishers with policies will be analyzed and all aspects will be reviewed in context of comparable Open Access initiatives in Europe and its potential to expand into other fields. Nina Karlstrøm will add the view of a National Contact Point and present benefits and challenges for national organizations within the SCOAP3 network using her organization CRIStin as an example.

Highlights

  • SCOAP3 is a global partnership which converts high-quality subscription journals in High Energy Physics to Open Access through re-direction of existing subscription funds

  • Norwegian affiliation of a total of 8,424 records Working with the SCOAP3 API to pull the articles to CRIStin

  • them to the repositories CRIStin pays Norway's share of SCOAP3 Publishers deduct SCOAP3 journal costs from their central invoices to CRIStin CRIStin adds proportional costs to invoices sent to institutions

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Summary

John Ellis in his office at CERN

2% of overall publications from CERN article references arXiv.org: first Open Access repository on the web. Part of the CERN mission (1953): “[...] sponsoring of international co-operation in nuclear research, including co-operation outside the Laboratories [which] may include in particular [...] the dissemination of information”. CERN principle of Openness (1953): “the results of its experimental and theoretical work shall be published or otherwise made generally available”

Publisher Journal articles
Investment of fresh money
Scenes from a small country
No costs and no barriers for scientists
Full Text
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