Nothing on this guide is to be construed as legal advice. These pages are intended to provide information and guidance in the application and use of open access principles and practices.
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GUIDE TO OPEN ACCESS
“Open Access” is a term commonly used for a movement that promotes free availability and unrestricted use of research and scholarship. Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge to the reader, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions, so there are no price barriers and no permission barriers.
The definition of the concept emerged from three conferences:
More detailed information is available in Peter Suber's Open Access Overview.
Green OA publishing refers to the self-archiving of published or pre-published works for free public use. Authors will provide access to preprints or post-prints (pending publisher permission) in an institutional or discipline archive. Examples of green OA include Scholar's Mine and arXiv.org.
Gold OA publishing refers to works published in an open access journal and accessed via the journal or publisher's website. Examples of Gold OA include PLOS (Public Library of Science) and BioMed Central.
There are several options for making your research more widely available: