Wellcome Trust Releases Updated Open Access Policy; Endorses Plan S and Joins cOAlition S (Along with Gates Foundation)
From The Wellcome Trust:
“We want our policy to support a transition to a fully open access world, where no research is behind a paywall.”
–Robert Kiley, Head of Open Research
Earlier this year we defined a set of objectives for our updated OA policy. At its core, and consistent with our policy over the past 13 years, we want to make sure that the knowledge and discoveries which result from our funding are made freely available and used in a way that maximises their benefit to health.
We also want our OA policy to:
- support a transition to a fully open access world, where no research is behind a paywall
- be as clear and as straightforward as possible to comply with
- make sure that the costs of complying with it are fair and proportionate.
The updated OA policy will apply to all research articles submitted for publication from 1 January 2020. Until then, researchers must continue to use our current policy.
We’re not changing our policy for monographs and book chapters – but we are keeping it under review.
What Will change?
There are five key changes to our OA policy.
1. All Wellcome-funded research articles must be made freely available through PubMed Central (PMC) and Europe PMC at the time of publication. We previously allowed a six-month embargo period. This change will make sure that the peer-reviewed version is freely available to everyone at the time of publication.
2. All articles must be published under a Creative Commons attribution licence (CC-BY). We previously only required this licence when an article processing charge (APC) was paid. This change will make sure that others – including commercial entities and AI/text-data mining services – can reuse our funded research to discover new knowledge.
3. We will no longer cover the cost of OA publishing in subscription journals (‘hybrid OA’). We previously supported this model, but no longer believe that it supports a transition to full OA.
4. Where there is a significant public health benefit to preprints being shared widely and rapidly, such as a disease outbreak, these preprints must be published:
before peer review
on an approved platform that supports immediate publication of the complete manuscript
under a CC-BY licence.
This is a new requirement which will make sure that important research findings are shared as soon possible and before peer review.
5. Wellcome-funded organisations must sign or publicly commit to the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA), or an equivalent. We may ask organisations to show that they’re complying with this as part of our organisation audits. This is a new requirement to encourage organisations to consider the intrinsic merit of the work when making promotion and tenure decisions, not just the title of the journal or publisherAligning Our Policy With Other Funders
One of the key messages from grantholders was that our OA policy should be aligned with those of other funders.
We’re pleased to say that the updated policy is fully in line with Plan S, the OA policy framework developed by the European Commission and Science Europe. Plan S is endorsed by major funders, including UK Research and Innovation, the European Research Council and, as of today, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
In aligning with Plan S, we will also join cOAlition S and work in partnership with our funding partners in Europe and beyond to support a transition to full, unrestricted and immediate access to all research articles.
Resources
Full Text of Updated Open Access Policy
2 pages; PDF.
OA Policy FAQ
Wellcome and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Join the Open Access Coalition
Wellcome’s Open Access Policy Review – Consultation Analysis (via Figshare)
Wellcome is Going to Review its Open Access Policy (March 5, 2018)
Source Post
Media Coverage
Wellcome and Gates join bold European open-access plan (via Nature)
Filed under: Data Files, Funding, News, Open Access, Publishing, Reports
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.