Making the benefits of open access (OA) available to all

STM and our members have undertaken significant work over many years to ensure that the benefits inherent in open access (OA) publishing are available to as broad a discipline and geographically wide a stakeholder group as possible. This has comprised two approaches as described below.   

Annex – Specific product/publisher examples

  • Research4Life: In a United Nations (UN)-publisher partnership, STM members collaborate on subject collections including with the World Health Organization (WHO), the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).  STM’s Director of Research4Life Publisher Partnerships works with the R4L community to develop approaches to access and participation that are fit for purpose for OA publishing including best practice guidelines on APC waivers and discounts. 
  • Country-specific pricing pilots: publishers are experimenting with pricing pilots to make publishing OA more affordable for authors in low- and low-middle income countries such as the Cambridge Open Equity Initiative and Elsevier.
  • Collaborative funding initiatives: these may encompass broad initiatives or disciplines, such as the Open Access Books Initiative from Taylor & Francis.
  • Content sharing: publishers are finding ways for researchers to share content easily and legally, such as Springer Nature’s SharedIt.
  • Assisting disadvantaged groups to level the playing field: such as Springer Nature providing additional support to female researchers in India, Elsevier’s Scientific African journal which expands access to African research, or ACS’ initiative which provides free language services to authors. Clarivate has also recently changed its policy to help level the playing field for all trustworthy journals and increase representation of OA journals and those from the Global South.
  • Modifying our policies, codes of conduct and support for events to ensure a more diverse and inclusive approach, such as Springer Nature’s commitment.
  • Capacity building on OA: including supporting better understanding of publishing and open research best practice, such as the T&F editorial-led program of training and resources for researchers in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Democratising participation in publishing OA: including broadening participation in editing and peer review of content by rewarding contributions, such as PeerJ.