open access in france: state of the art & perspectives
DESCRIPTION
Presentations from the LIBER 2013 workshop on Scholarly Communication and Research Infrastructures: : 'New Horizons for Open Access Policies in Europe' and 'Ten Recommendations on Research Data Management - What's Next?'TRANSCRIPT
in France
State of the art & perspectives
LIBER – Munich – June 26th 2013
Jean-François LUTZ@jflutz
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1. Looking back at the 2000’s
1. 2012, a turning point ?
1. Short- & mid-term perspectives
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Introduction
France, key figures (2010)
•100 000 researchers in public sector
•70 000 publications listed in Scopus
•168 open access journals
•68 repositories
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1. Looking back at the 2000’s
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1. Looking back at the 2000’s
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Infrastructures : two major players, numerous others
• Green :
INP Toulouse : OATAO
IFREMER : Archimer
Sciences Po : SPIRE
• Gold :
EDP Sciences
CEDRAM (Mathematics)
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1. Looking back at the 2000’s
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Policies : only starting
• IFREMER : deposit policy, full text mediated deposit, very satisfactory compliance rate.
• INRA : deposit policy, repository used for research assessment.
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2. 2012, a turning point ?
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2. 2012, a turning point ?
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European Commission: July 17th, 2012
Open Access for H2020
Recommendation to member States
In France, various reactions depending on the stakeholders…
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2. 2012, a turning point ?
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2. 2012, a turning point ?
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Geneviève Fioraso, Higher Education and Research Minister, January 24th, 2013
• « scientific information is a common good that should be available to all »
• strong support towards repositories• support for a variety of publishing models• action plan in 7 areas (green, gold, embargos, legal
issues…)
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2. 2012, a turning point ?
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Research institutions: warm welcome ! But action still needed…
Publishers (esp. in HSS disciplines): launch of a debate
• Open Access seen as a threat or as an opportunity
• distinction between HSS ans STM (regarding embargos for instance) or inclusion of HSS with other disciplines
• experimentation of new business models (Gold ≠ APC)
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3. Short & mid-term perspectives
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3. Short & mid-term perspectives
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Policy:
• National level:
• Institutional level: deposit mandates at INRIA and Univ. Of Angers
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3. Short & mid-term perspectives
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Infrastructures:
• Green OA: BSN group on repositories– Signature of a new nation-wide agrrement around HAL
• Gold OA: BSN group on scientific publication– Study on the cost of publication
• Open data: still under discussion
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Conclusion
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European level
• coordination of OA policies, esp. for national research funders,
• publication costs: scalability of existing studies (PEER, Houghton…), establishment of a « fair » APC price.