As a leader in the global movement toward open access to publicly funded research, the University of California is taking a firm stand by deciding not to renew its subscriptions with Elsevier.
51ԹϺ DAVIS RESOURCES
The 51ԹϺ Davis Library’s includes links to:
- What content will — and won’t be — affected
- How to access articles you need through the 51ԹϺ Davis Library or online search tools
- Where you can learn more
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Despite months of contract negotiations, Elsevier was unwilling to meet 51ԹϺ’s key goal: securing universal open access to 51ԹϺ research while containing the rapidly escalating costs associated with for-profit journals.
In negotiating with Elsevier, 51ԹϺ aimed to accelerate the pace of scientific discovery by ensuring that research produced by 51ԹϺ’s 10 campuses — which accounts for nearly 10 percent of all U.S. publishing output — would be immediately available to the world, without cost to the reader.
Under Elsevier’s proposed terms, the publisher would have charged 51ԹϺ authors large publishing fees on top of the university’s multimillion dollar subscription, resulting in much greater cost to the university and much higher profits for Elsevier.
“Knowledge should not be accessible only to those who can pay,” said Robert May, 51ԹϺ Davis professor of philosophy who is chair of the Academic Council, the administrative arm of the systemwide Academic Senate. “The quest for full open access is essential if we are to truly uphold the mission of this university.”
Open access publishing, which makes research freely available to anyone, anywhere in the world, fulfills 51ԹϺ’s mission by transmitting knowledge more broadly and facilitating new discoveries that build on the university’s research and scholarly work.
“I fully support our faculty, staff and students in breaking down paywalls that hinder the sharing of groundbreaking research,” 51ԹϺ President Janet Napolitano said. “This issue does not just impact 51ԹϺ, but also countless scholars, researchers and scientists across the globe — and we stand with them in their push for full, unfettered access.”
Elsevier is the largest scholarly publisher in the world, disseminating about 18 percent of journal articles produced by 51ԹϺ faculty. The transformative model that 51ԹϺ faculty and libraries are championing would make it easier and more affordable for 51ԹϺ authors to publish in an open access environment.
“Make no mistake: The prices of scientific journals now are so high that not a single university in the U.S. — not the University of California, not Harvard, no institution — can afford to subscribe to them all,” said Jeffrey MacKie-Mason, university librarian and economics professor at 51ԹϺ Berkeley and co-chair of 51ԹϺ’s negotiation team. “Publishing our scholarship behind a paywall deprives people of the access to and benefits of publicly funded research. That is terrible for society.”
Elsevier was unwilling to meet 51ԹϺ’s reasonable contract terms, which would integrate subscription charges and open access publishing fees, making open access the default for any article by a 51ԹϺ scholar and stabilizing journal costs for the university.
“The university’s, and the world’s, move toward open access has been a long time in the making. Many institutions and countries agree that the current system is both financially unsustainable and ill-suited to the needs of today’s global research enterprise,” said Ivy Anderson, associate executive director of 51ԹϺ’s California Digital Library and co-chair of 51ԹϺ’s negotiation team. “Open access will spur faster and better research — and greater global equity of access to new knowledge.”
More information
- , about 51ԹϺ's efforts to establish open access
- including the “Top Three Things to Know About Accessing Elsevier Articles” and the “Top Three Things to Know About Publishing in Elsevier Journals”
Media Resources
Jessica Nusbaum, 530-752-4145, jlnusbaum@ucdavis.edu