[GOAL] Open access and Brexit
Reckling, Falk
Falk.Reckling at fwf.ac.at
Tue Jul 19 16:01:35 BST 2016
Dear Colleagues,
Please find attached a very interesting interview with Caroline Edwards from the Open Library of Humanities which wants to extend to other disciplines:
In English: http://scilog.fwf.ac.at/en/article/4482/the-gold-route-to-open-science
In German: http://scilog.fwf.ac.at/artikel/4479/der-goldene-weg-zu-open-science
Best Falk
___________________________________________________________________
Falk Reckling, PhD
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Strategy - Policy, Evaluation, Analysis / Strategy - Nationale Programmes
Head of Departments
Sensengasse 1
A-1090 Vienna
Tel: +43-1-5056740-8861
Mobile: +43-664-5307368
Email: falk.reckling at fwf.ac.at<mailto:falk.reckling at fwf.ac.at>
ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-1326-1766
Twitter: FWFOpenAccess<https://twitter.com/FWFOpenAccess>
Publications: https://zenodo.org/collection/user-fwf
Von: goal-bounces at eprints.org [mailto:goal-bounces at eprints.org] Im Auftrag von Richard Poynder
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 29. Juni 2016 16:24
An: 'Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)' <goal at eprints.org>
Betreff: [GOAL] Open access and Brexit
The UK research community's response to the recent referendum - in which a majority of 52% voted for the UK to leave the European Union (or "Brexit") - has been one of horror and disbelief.
This is no surprise, not least because Brexit would have a serious impact on research funding in the UK. Nature reports that UK universities currently get around 16% of their research funding from the EU, and that the UK currently hosts more EU-funded holders of ERC grants than any other member state. Elsewhere, Digital Science has estimated that the UK could lose £1 billion in science funding if the UK government does not make up the shortfall in EU-linked research funds.
But what are the implications of Brexit for open access? Given the highly volatile situation the UK now finds itself in we cannot say anything for certain. However, any squeeze on funding will surely be detrimental to current plans to migrate scholarly publishing from a subscription to an open access system.
With these thoughts in mind I put some questions to long-time proponent of open access, and Professor of Structural Biology at Imperial College London, Stephen Curry. His thoughts on the topic can be read here:
http://poynder.blogspot.co.uk/2016/06/open-access-and-brexit.html
Richard Poynder
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