developing a framework for open access policies in the united states

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Palestra apresentada à CONFOA 2013 (Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brasil, de 06 a 08 de outubro de 2013) na Mesa I - Políticas públicas de acesso aberto - Heather Joseph - ESTADOS UNIDOS - SPARC

TRANSCRIPT

A Framework for Creating Open Access Policy in the United

States

Heather Joseph

Executive Director, SPARC

IV Open Access Luso-Brazilian Conference

Sao Paolo, Brazil

October 7, 2013

Our Mission:

Expand the distribution of research in a way that leverages digital

networked technology, reduces financial pressures on libraries, and

creates a more open system of scholarly communication.

Why “Open” as the Endgame?

Each Year, the U.S. Government spends ~US$60 billion on scientific

research.

We Make this Investment In Order to:

• Generate new ideas • Accelerate scientific discovery • Fuel innovation • Grow the economy • Improve the welfare of the public

This can only happen if we can access and use the results of this

research.

“If I as a scientist go through the work of designing and conducting

an experiment, but don’t tell anyone the results, what what the point of me doing the work in the

first place?”

- Dr. Keith Yamamoto, Executive Vice Dean, UCSF Medical School

Over 200,000 articles report on U.S-funded research each year...

…But the majority of these can still only be read by purchasing

access through a journal.

Current system is not optimized to achieve desired outcomes.

Need to remove the barriers (financial, legal and technical) that

are blocking us from achieving these outcomes.

www.arl.org/sparc 12

“Removing access barriers to this literature will accelerate research,

enrich education, share the learning of the rich with the poor and the poor with the rich, make this literature as

useful as it can be, and lay the foundation for uniting humanity in a common intellectual conversation and

quest for knowledge.“

Budapest Open Access Initiative – February 14, 2002

www.boai.org

www.arl.org/sparc 14

“By open access, we mean the free availability of articles on the public

internet, permitting any users to read, download, copy, distribute, print,

search or link to the full text of these articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software or use them

for any other lawful purpose…”

- The Budapest Open Access Initiative – February 14, 2002

Open Access = Access + Reuse

Open Access has become a Policy Imperative.

Governments would boost innovation and get a better return

on their investment in publicly funded research by making

research findings more widely available…. And by doing so, they would maximize social returns on

public investments.” -- International Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, Report on scientific publishing, 2005

The U.S. increasingly recognizes the need to create a policy

framework that supports all stakeholders in a transition to a

more open system of sharing research results.

Sources of U.S. Information Policy

• Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. 105)

• Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552)

• Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. Chapter 35)

• Electronic FOIA Amendments of 1996.

• Government Paperwork Elimination Act of 1998.

• Office of Management and Budget Circular No. A-130, “Management of Federal Information Resources,” (61 FR 6425, February 20, 1996)

OMB Circular A-130

“…government information is a valuable national resource, and… the economic benefits to society are maximized when government information is available in a timely and equitable manner to all.”

- From OMB Circular No. A-130,

http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars/a130/a130trans4.html

“Open and unrestricted access to public

information at no more than the cost of

dissemination”

Policy Focus: Public is entitled to access and use

the results of research their tax dollars pay for.

Untill now, only 1 U.S. Funding Agency had enacted policy to

make this a reality.

But it’s a Big One…

The U.S. National Institutes of Health funds ~US$30 billion in basic and applied biomedical

research each year.

This represents fully one-half of the U.S. total US$60 billion annual investment in scientific research.

After piloting a voluntary Open Access policy for 3 years, U.S.

Congress enacts NIH Public Access Policy into law in 2008.

“The National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit to the National Library

of Medicine's PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-

reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly

available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication.”

Policy Requirements are Not Complicated…

But Outcomes Have Been Substantial.

• More than 2.5 million full text articles are now available though agencies repository.

• More than 1,000,000 unique users access those articles - every day.

• More than 2/3rds of the users come from outside of the academic community.

• Over 80% of eligible researchers comply.

• Policy costs less than 1/100th of 1% of NIH’s overall operating budget to implement.

NIH Policy Outcomes

Note: NIH Policy leaves copyright negotiations up to indivudal

authors.

5 Years of Data from NIH Helped Drive Progress Towards More

Open Access Policies in the U.S.

Extensive Public Discussion/Consultation between

2009-2012.

Open Access advocates organized; and community responded with

thousands of detailed comments...

…focused on highlighting how Open Access Policies would

advance Federal Governments Objectives.

Objectives of Open Access Policies

• Generate new ideas • Accelerate scientific discovery • Fuel innovation • Grow the economy/create jobs • Improve the welfare of the public • Increase transparency and accountability

Advocates Also Responded with Calls for Action.

For White House to respond, petitions need 25,000 signatures

in 30 days.

We Did it in 13 Days.

And Ended up with 65,000 Signatures.

In February 2013, The White House Issued an Executive Directive

Supporting Expansion of NIH Policy to All Other U.S. Federal Science

Agencies

White House Directive requires more than 20 U.S. Federal

Agencies and Departments to now develop Open Access Policies.

“The Obama Administration is

committed to the proposition that citizens deserve access to the

results of scientific research their tax dollars have paid for. ”

“Public access policies will

accelerate scientific breakthroughs and innovation, promote entrepreneurship and

ehance economic growth and job creation…”

Directive presents useful guidance on objectives that the policies

must meet, and also on elements policies should contain.

Policies must “ensure that the public can read, download and

analyze” articles in an appropriate time frame.

Very Good.

However, it is a regulation, not legislation.

Continued push for legislation to make Open Access the “law of the land”; not just the “preference of

a president.”

The Proposed Legislation: “The Fair Access to Science and

Technology (FASTR) Act”

• Are “green” policies – requiring deposit in open access repositories

• Have provisions to ensure that articles can be both accessed and fully used.

Both FASTR and WH Directive:

• Shortens the allowable embargo period to 6 months (from 12):

• Requires that articles be made available under license terms that enable productive reuse.

• Specifically requires agencies to examine use of CC-BY license.

However, FASTR:

Much of the action in U.S. now (and for the forseeable future) is centered around interpretation,

codification, implementation of the White House Directive…

Much, but not all.

University/Campus Based Open Access Policies

More than 35 U.S. Higher Education Institutions have implemented

Open Access policies.

www.arl.org/sparc 60

“The broad dissemination of the results of scholarly inquiry and discourse is

essential for higher education to fulfill its long-standing commitment to the

advancement and conveyance of knowledge. Indeed, it is mission

critical.”

- U.S. University Provosts, in an Open Letter to the Higher Education Community, 7/24/06

www.arl.org/sparc 61

www.arl.org/sparc 62

And a new front open up in 2013…

State Open Access Policies.

- Illinois (Passed; signed into law) - California (Passed Assembly, vote due in Senate in January 2014) - New York (Pending first vote)

New legislation proposed on state level in 3 States:

All three proposed State bills are built on framework set out in

FASTR, and are complimentary with the WH Directive.

First time that the U.S. has had active Open Access policy

proposals in play at Executive Branch level, in Congress, in States

and on local campus Level.

Biggest challenges center around how policies are interpreted and

implemented.

Especially in the area of reuse rights.

The details matter. A lot.

“Download” vs. “Download in Bulk”

“Analyze” vs. “Enable Full Computational Analysis”

The details matter. A lot.

“Download” vs. “Download in Bulk”

“Analyze” vs. “Enable Full Computational Analysis”

Community must continue to keep pressure on to ensure the strongest possible implementation of Open

Access policies – and to make them permanent.

With nearly 2-dozen federal agencies, 50 States, and hundreds of campuses in play, it will not be

an easy or fast process, but…

It’s awfully hard to put the genie back in the bottle once the bottle is

truly Open.

Thank You

Heather Joseph

Executive Director, SPARC

21 Dupont Circle, Ste. 800

Washington DC 20036 USA

heather@arl.org (202) 296-2296 http://www.arl.org/sparc

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