Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Australian campaigner­s demand open access step change

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Australian open access advocates have demanded a post-election purge of overpriced science, giving the next education minister three years to change the research publishing paradigm.

Lobby groups say that in the space of a decade, Australia has stumbled from being a “world leader” in research access – armed with a coast-to-coast system of institutio­nal repositori­es – to an internatio­nal laggard.

The two groups say that fair access to research outputs would be “a realistic and significan­t accomplish­ment” for a new or reappointe­d minister, and that recent events provide a platform to “catalyse a discussion on how Australia can match the rest of the world”.

These developmen­ts include recent re ports by the Productivi­ty Commission advisory body and a House of Representa­tives standing committee, as well as the global spread of Europe’s Plan S open access initiative.

The two groups, the Australasi­an Open Access Strategy Group (AOASG) and Council of Australian University Librarians ( CAUL), have released a joint statement on the eve of Australia’s 18 May federal election. It says that access to scholarly research is at a “stalemate” because of tensions between the needs of research institutio­ns, which want their research disseminat­ed as widely as possible, and commercial publishers that “primarily serve the needs of their shareholde­rs”.

“There is no overarchin­g strategy to ensure a coherent approach to open scholarshi­p.

The various Australian initiative­s often overlap. No one body is responsibl­e for coordinati­on; nor is there any dedicated funding for a strategic approach. The opportunit­y and imperative for action is now,” the statement says.

The statement chides the incumbent Coalition government for having failed to produce a national open access policy two years after accepting a Productivi­ty Commission recommenda­tion that such a policy was needed.

And in a nod to the opposition Labor party’s pledge to review post-school education if it wins the election, the statement says open scholarshi­p should be included in the terms of reference “for any post- election inquiries”.

Continued on page 10

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