“Information is power. But like all power, there are those who want to keep it for themselves. The world’s entire scientific and cultural heritage, published over centuries in books and journals, is increasingly being digitised and locked up by a handful of private corporations.”— Aaron Swartz
(This story appears in the 17 May, 2013 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)
The Indian Academy of Sciences has a repository wherein they try to gather all research papers published by their Fellows, both living and deceased. CSIR laboratories - most of them - have repositories of their own and all of them are harvested by the group led by Dr Raj Hirwani in Pune. Important journal publishers in India - Indian Academy of Sciences, INSA, CSIR\'s NISCAIR, ICMR, ICAR, etc. - have made their journals open access. All these can make available ONLY papers written by Indian researchers or those published in Indian journals. Those may not account for even 3% of the world\'s research output. The other 97% are published by scientists outside India and appear in journals published outside India. We need access to them. Free access to them will be possible only if they are also accessible through OA repositories (such as arXiv, RePEc, PubMed Central) and OA journals. While we may do all that we can to promote OA in India, we should also join the worldwide OA movement and promote OA throughout the world. Things have started happening now ten years after the Budapest meeting came up with the first declaration on OA. The US Congress is considering the FASTR bill and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy has issued a mandate for most research carried out with public funding in the US to be made open. Similar developments have taken place in Europe and Australia as well as the UK. It is rather unfortunate that the science administrators, with a few exceptions, in India have turned a deaf ear so far to pleas for mandating open access to publicly funded research.
on May 23, 2013Agreed with Aaron Swartz. I personally try and use SSRN as much as possible. All are public universities should ensure that the research output from them like thesis and research papers must all be published for free access on an online platform. Organizations such as jstor are really pissing off.
on May 19, 2013I agree with the author that somebody has to take the lead to make research outputs into public databases. For this, Open Access India, an online community was formed for advocating Open Access to Science and Scholarship in India. Through its page on facebook and blog , it is pursuading the researchers in India to share their research outputs for public good. Few days back the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) has place its OA policy for comments on its website. On behalf of the Open Access India, community, we are submitting our comments/suggestions and wish all other stakeholders to do the same so that a strong and effective OA policy would be developed in India.
on May 17, 2013" Let knowledge come from all directions ", as they say it; then, WHAT'S THE PROBLEM IN WELCOMING O-A WITH OPEN ARMS (Excepting , of course the great Business Anglers !!!! )
on May 14, 2013