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  • Article
    Lessons equitable open access for the to global transition to research
    (Open Future, 2025) Hagemann, Melissa; Gürdal, Gültekin; Madran, Orçun; Bulut, Burcu
    Open access unlocks research and facilitates collaborations to address the world’s greatest challenges. It allows the public to engage with research and supports policymakers, journalists, medical professionals, teachers, students and the general public to translate research into action. Since open access (OA) was defined by the Budapest Open Access Initiative (BOAI) in 2002, a global movement has driven OA from an untested concept into the mainstream. Yet to fully realize the promise of OA that was envisioned when the BOAI was launched, we must ensure that the systems we are building are equitable and enable anyone, anywhere to both access and contribute to the global record of scholarship. To achieve this goal, we can take lessons from countries that pioneered the equitable development of scholarly communications. This paper is based on a series of interviews conducted with OA leaders who are implementing equitable OA models. Today, approximately half of all research articles are OA and freely available to read, yet new barriers have been created for authors to publish. These barriers, including Article Processing Charges (APCs) and the current research assessment system, are not impacting authors evenly. APCs are fees charged by publishers to authors (or their institution) to make their research articles OA. The rise in use of APCs essentially shifts the paywall from the reader to the author. There is growing recognition that OA publishing models that rely on APCs paid by authors are neither equitable nor sustainable. Researchers, including those early in their careers, as well as those in the Global South, often lack the financial resources necessary to pay APCs. Globally, there is a need to reform research assessment and rewards to improve incentives. The current assessment system faces challenges including a focus on metrics over quality, marginalization of important research areas, and a lack of recognition for diverse research outputs and contributions. Many countries in the Global South now use the Web of Science, 1a commercial platform which uses the Journal Impact Factor. While there are myriad problems with the use of such metrics, including a bias towards English-language research, these metrics are often used to determine university rankings. In the Global South, where some institutions do not have the funds to purchase journal subscriptions, leaders have developed their own systems and structures, including publishing platforms and repositories. What they have created is an ecosystem of community-led infrastructure, institutional support for publishing and alternative forms of research assessment which have allowed academics to be involved in the creation of the publishing enterprise and not simply to adopt the governance structures imposed by private interests. Yet these successful initiatives, such as the publishing platforms, Redalyc and SciELO in Latin America, are under threat from commercial models, particularly the APC-based business model, being driven from the Global North. The BOAI20 Recommendations emphasize that “OA is not an end in itself, but a means to further ends. Above all, it is a means to the equity, quality, usability, and sustainability of research.” Equitable models of OA do not charge authors to publish and are openly available online. OA journals which do not charge fees to read or publish in have become known as diamond journals. In addition, depositing versions of articles into institutional or subject based repositories, known as the green route, also represent an equitable form of OA. These equitable models of OA are supported by community-governed infrastructure, akin to a Public Digital Infrastructure for OA. Through interviews with OA leaders in Chile, Costa Rica, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa, Türkiye, and Zimbabwe who are implementing equitable models, I offer lessons for the global transition to equitable OA.
  • Correction
    Corrigendum To “ankos Publisher Application System and Its Impact on the E-Resource Evaluation Process” [serials Review 39 (2013) 29–36]
    (Taylor and Francis Ltd., 2013) Bulut, Burcu; Uğur, Handan; Gürdal, Gültekin; Holt, İlkay; Çukadar, Sami; Akbayrak, Emre H.; Çelebi, Mustafa K.
    [No abstract available]
  • Article
    Türkiye’de Açık Erişim ve Açık Bilim
    (Üniversite ve Araştırma Kütüphanecileri Derneği, 2020) Bulut, Burcu; Çelik, Sönmez; Gürdal, Gültekin; Holt, İlkay; Can, Gönül Kafalı; Madran, Orçun; Tonta, Yaşar
    Açık erişim, bilimsel bilgilere herhangi bir engel olmaksızın erişilmesini, bu bilgilerin kullanılmasını ve paylaşılmasını sağlar. Kişisel ve toplumsal düzeyde hepimizi ilgilendiren açık erişim ve açık bilim çalışmaları Türkiye’de son yıllarda önemli bir ivme kazanmıştır. Ulusal düzeyde gerçekleştirilen çalışmalar ve yürütülen Avrupa Birliği projeleri politika yapıcıların açık erişim ve açık bilim konularına ilgi göstermelerini sağlayarak gelişmeleri tetiklemiştir. Bu gelişmeler 2012’den itibaren düzenlenen konferans, seminer vb. gibi etkinliklerle ve devlet kurum ve kuruluşlarının da sürece dâhil olmasıyla birlikte daha da hızlanmıştır. Bu çalışmada Türkiye’deki farklı kişi, kurum ve kuruluşlar tarafından gerçekleştirilen açık erişim ve açık bilim faaliyetleri literatüre dayanarak incelenmektedir.
  • Article
    Citation - WoS: 2
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Ankos Publisher Application System and Its Impact on the E-Resource Evaluation Process
    (Taylor and Francis Ltd., 2013) Bulut, Burcu; Uğur, Handan; Gürdal, Gültekin; Holt, İlkay; Çukadar, Sami; Akbayrak, Emre H.; Çelebi, Mustafa K.
    The Publisher Application System(PAS) is aWeb-based archiving and online evaluation systemdeveloped by the Database Evaluation Group (DEG), one of the working groups formed within the Anatolian University Libraries Consortium (ANKOS). The DEG was formed in 2008 to inquire and evaluate e-resources suited to the needs of the consortium; to follow up similar consortial activities worldwide as well as developments in connection with the scientific publishing industry; and to determine, implement, and improve pricing models in accordance with the prevailing economic, legal, and academic system. Development of the PAS was essential to ensure standardization and sustainability towards a more detailed and effective analysis of e-resources qualifying for evaluation by ANKOS. The PAS played an important part not only in establishing and defining the workflow of the DEG, but also in creating an archive of both the e-resources submitted to the consortium and the applicant publishers/agents submitting these resources. This article outlines the process that started with the foundation of the DEG through the formation of the PAS as well as the present setup of the system. It is also hoped that this case study will have a positive contribution to the processes being followed by the persons and the groups engaged in similar activities.