Open Access News

News from the open access movement


Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Repository and OA policy coming to the Indian Academy of Sciences

N. Mukunda, Journals, Open Access, Copyright, Repositories:  Some Viewpoints from an Academy, the keynote address at the 2009 meeting of India's National Aerospace Laboratories (Bangalore,  March 26, 2009).  Mukunda is the Editor of Publications at the Indian Academy of Sciences.  (Thanks to Subbiah Arunachalam.)  Excerpt:

...The [Indian Academy of Science]’s efforts in the Open Access direction go back to 1998. It was then that the journal Pramana was made available on the Academy website completely free for all to read. Thereafter all the other Academy journals have also been made freely available online, so now all ten Academy journals are available....In 2006 the Academy entered into an agreement with Springer to co-publish the international online and print editions of the ten journals, but with the proviso that world-wide open access on the Academy website would continue. So now there is the version on the Academy site, which is accessible world-wide and free, and also the value-added SpringerLink version available to paid subscribers. This arrangement is working quite well. The download figures from both sites are quite encouraging, and in any case the visibility of the journals world-wide is much better than it used to be. [The Indian National Science Academy, INSA] by the way has signed the Berlin Open Access Declaration and its journals are also freely accessible....

4) The [April 2008] INSA meeting discussed many aspects including the need to educate working scientists about their rights with respect to copyright....Some of the major INSA recommendations are to granting agencies to mandate Open Access for results of publicly funded research, and to scientists to publish in Open Access journals by choice.

Some tasks are set for the Academies too, such as setting up Institutional Repositories, and to work toward Open Access in all possible ways. In this context, it is possible that the three national Science Academies of India – IASc, INSA and NASI – may try to cooperate in these matters, as they have been doing in the case of science education recently....

6)...With generous help from the Indian Institute of Science, we are trying and hoping to set up an Institutional Repository covering all publications of all Fellows past and present. Starting since 1934 – the total number of Fellows is about 1500, 900 present and 600 past. And the total number of research publications may be around 60,000 or 75,000....We should try to get a substantial number of entries into the Repository within this year, catch up as soon as possible, then make it an ongoing automatic process....It seems about 50 institutions in India already have set up such repositories, but we have miles to go before we sleep! ...