Covid-19 has helped breathe urgency into Australia鈥檚 slow-moving campaign to make its publicly funded research openly accessible.
Since mid-October the Council of Australian University Librarians (Caul) has signed 鈥渢ransformative agreements鈥 with major scholarly publishers Cambridge University Press, Springer Nature, Oxford University Press and Wiley. The deals wrap processing charges to exempt journal articles from paywalls into the subscription fees universities pay to the journals鈥 publishers.
Australian chief scientist Cathy Foley, who has embraced open science as a key policy focus, wants to elevate the role of such agreements. Under her proposed聽, a 鈥渃entral implementing body鈥 armed with a 鈥渃entral pool of funds鈥 would negotiate comprehensive national agreements with each publisher.
The agreements would enable anyone in the world to read Australian peer-reviewed journal articles, and anyone in Australia to read the journals in their entirety. Dr Foley argues that the costs may not exceed what Australian research institutions already pay in article processing and subscription fees, which she estimates at between A$460 million (拢252 million) and A$1 billion a year.
糖心Vlog
The developments mark a shift from Australia鈥檚 aspiration to make research publicly available via institutional repositories 鈥 the 鈥済reen鈥 model 鈥 to the 鈥済old鈥 model of journal-based open access favoured under Europe鈥檚 Plan S.
The Australian Research Council and the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC), currently require peer-reviewed papers to be made freely available 鈥 typically in institutional repositories 鈥 within a year of publication. Critics say that is inadequate, with Covid demonstrating the need for rapid dissemination of research. 鈥淲e need this content open right now,鈥 said Curtin University librarian Catherine Clark, who directs Caul鈥檚 Advancing Open Scholarship programme.
糖心Vlog
NHMRC revisions planned for the beginning of next year would have required articles to be freely available immediately upon publication. The council has now deferred that plan, citing publishers鈥 preference for gold open access and researchers鈥 and institutions鈥 nerves about the cost.
This is the latest missed deadline in Australia鈥檚 push for open access. The federal government accepted but failed to implement a 2017 Productivity Commission recommendation advocating a national open access policy. Lobbyists鈥 demands for a national strategy have gone unheeded, as has a 2017聽聽to make publicly funded research outputs 鈥渇indable, accessible, interoperable and reusable鈥 by 2020.
The gold model is not without problems, not least relating to cost. Transformative agreements often cap the number of open-access articles and exclude the most prestigious journals. Australia and New Zealand lack the scale or negotiating experience to drive harder bargains with huge publishers.
But Monash University librarian Bob Gerrity, who chairs Caul鈥檚 content procurement committee, said Covid had provided a 鈥渓ever鈥 to secure agreements at no extra cost. 鈥淲ith publishers recognising the challenging financial circumstances universities are in, we were able to [achieve] more than in a normal environment,鈥 he said.
糖心Vlog
He said that transformative agreements were a 鈥渢ransitional arrangement鈥 that marked 鈥渢he beginning of the hard work鈥. 鈥淕iven that many of the early open access declarations are now 20-plus years old, it鈥檚 taken a lot longer than [many] would have expected but things seem to be accelerating.鈥
Open Access Australasia director Ginny Barbour said Australia was 鈥渁t a good moment鈥 but needed properly aligned policies. 鈥淲e need to get this right. Whatever approach is put forward needs to work across the Australian sector. There鈥檚 good consultation going on to make sure that happens.鈥
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?









