Chemistry society turns subscriptions into gold
The Royal Society of Chemistry is to waive its open-access publication fees for researchers from universities that subscribe to all its journals.
The Royal Society of Chemistry is to waive its open-access publication fees for researchers from universities that subscribe to all its journals.
With hostility from the Home Office over international student numbers, membership of Horizon Europe slipping away and heavy demands placed on institutions by regulators, UK university staff will be...
Publishing deals need to acknowledge the reality that most research is not yet gold open access, says Elsevier’s Gemma Hersh
Universities report winning more conciliatory terms on open access question in their own negotiations with publisher
Although Finland and South Korea have agreed deals with the publisher, European sectors are looking to take a harder line
Publisher argues European countries could move to subscription-free approach without international consensus
Report outlines the potential perils of a shift away from central funding for Jisc
John Sutherland, Sarah Churchwell and others pick books that capture truths about the sector
A disastrous open-access policy lashes the promise of the digital age to an outmoded buggy of a model, laments Martin McQuillan
A disastrous open-access policy lashes the promise of the digital age to an outmoded buggy of a model, laments Martin McQuillan
The move to open access should not mean cuts to research: the government and industry could pitch in to cover the transition
Open-access publishing, once a niche preoccupation, is now a hot-button issue. But concern is growing that unintended consequences of new publication mandates will cost individual scholars and the UK...
Going for gold is the solid approach, argues Michael Mabe...but David Price counters that only green is sustainable
Free, immediate and permanently available research results for all - that's what the open-access campaigners want. Unsurprisingly, the subscription publishers disagree. Zoë Corbyn weighs up the...
The digital archiving of images dating back to the earliest days of photography is set to revolutionise teaching. Chris Johnston finds out more. The pen may be mightier than the sword, but images...