Academic publishing made
more accessible for scientists in developing world
March 22, 2004, New York, NY & San Francisco, CA. The Open Society
Institute (OSI) and Public Library of Science (PLoS) today announced a new
grants program to support open access publishing in developing and
transition countries. The grants will make it much easier for scientists
based in developing and transition countries to submit articles to the
premiere peer-reviewed research journals published by PLoS.
"Scientists in poorer countries have been virtually excluded from the
journal publishing world", said Darius Cuplinskas, Director of OSI's
Information Program. "Open access journals will remove barriers and make
these scientists full members of the international scientific community.
PLoS is a non-profit advocacy organization and a publisher of open-access
journals, which are available free of charge online and are subsidized
largely by author-side charges for publication. While this pay-to-publish
system allows PLoS to make scientific and medical literature immediately
accessible to anyone in the world with an Internet connection, many authors
from developing countries cannot afford the fees. Now, scientists affiliated
with the OSI-funded member institutions will be entitled to a waiver of
publication charges for their articles in PLoS journals.
OSIs Information Program has been a strong supporter of the open access
movement. Its Budapest Open Access Initiative, launched in 2002, advocates
for the support of two parallel strategies for the adoption of open access:
self-archiving and open access journals.
The OSI/PLoS Institutional Membership grants will target developing and
transition countries. Authors from the least developed countries will
receive a waiver of publication charge upon request, a policy PLoS has had
in place since the launch of its first journal, PLoS Biology, in October
2003. To ensure that ability to pay publication charges does not influence
the review process, PLoS has a firewall in place to shield requests from all
editors and reviewers.
The debate about open access has shifted recently, said Dr. Helen Doyle,
PLoS director of development and strategic alliances. Doubts about its value
have been replaced with doubts about its viability. This commitment from OSI
answers the question of how scientists in developing countries will be able
to publish in our journals on a large scale.
The complete list of countries and regions where institutions are
eligible for the new memberships is as follows:
- Albania
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Belarus
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Botswana
- Bulgaria
- Cameroon
- Cote d'Ivoire
- Croatia
- Czech Republic
- Estonia
- Georgia
- Ghana
- Guatemala
|
- Hungary
- Indonesia
- Kazakhstan
- Kosovo
- Kyrgyzstan
- Laos
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Macedonia
- Moldova
- Mongolia
- Namibia
- Nigeria
- Peru
|
- Poland
- Romania
- Russia
- Serbia and Montenegro
- Slovakia
- South Africa
- Swaziland
- Tajikistan
- Thailand
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Uzbekistan
- Vietnam
- Zimbabwe
|
More information about the grants is available at
www.soros.org/openaccess/grants.shtml

The joint OSI-PLoS announcement follows the January launch of the PLoS
Institutional Membership program. More information about the PLoS Membership
Program is available at
www.plos.org/support 
___________________________________________
Press release submitted by HIF-net at WHO on behalf of Virginia Barbour,
PLoS.
[HIF-net at WHO profile: Virginia Barbour works for the Public Library of
Science in the UK. The Public Library of Science (PLoS) is a non-profit
organization of scientists and physicians committed to making the world's
scientific and medical literature a freely available public resource.
Website: www.plos.org
Email:
vbarbour@plos.org

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