Australia ups the ante on global access to research

18 September 2008

By *Zoë Corbyn*<http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/biography.asp?contact=20>

Canberra aims to unlock the 'dark archives' of publicly funded research,
reports Zoe Corbyn

A pioneering move by the Australian Government to allow open access to all
of the nation's publicly funded research could "set all the dominoes falling
worldwide", it was predicted this week.

Kim Carr, the Australian Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and
Research, said he intended to implement reforms aimed at "unlocking public
information and content, including the results of publicly funded research",
following a review of the country's innovation.

The review says that scientific knowledge produced in Australia should be
"placed in machine-searchable repositories" developed and implemented using
universities and public funding agencies.

"To the maximum extent practicable, information, research and content funded
by the Australian governments ... should be made freely available over the
internet as part of the global public commons," it says. "This should be
done while the Australian Government encourages other countries to
reciprocate by making their own contributions to the global digital public
commons."

Giving a speech on the report, Mr Carr said that Australia - which produces
3 per cent of the world's research papers - "is and will remain" a net
importer of knowledge. As a result, he said, it was in the country's
interest to "promote the freest possible flow of information domestically
and globally".

"The arguments for stepping out first on open access are the same as the
arguments for stepping out first on emissions trading - the more willing we
are to show leadership on this, the more chance we have of persuading other
countries to reciprocate," he said.

Open-access advocate Stevan Harnad, professor of cognitive science at the
University of Southampton, said the development was significant. "Australia
looks poised now to be the one that sets all the dominoes falling
worldwide," he added.

He said that the UK Government had also received a recommendation, in 2004,
from the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology to
mandate open access but had rejected it "under pressure from the publishing
lobby". Since then a growing number of universities and funders around the
world have been introducing open-access policies.

Colin Steele, chair of Australia's National Scholarly Communications Forum,
told Times Higher Education that both the previous Government and the
current Labor Government had supported the funding of university
repositories, but in many instances the process has been slow because of
"high- level administrative indifference" within universities and publisher
pressure to maintain only "dark archives" of closed-access material.

"Minister Carr's statement, plus the whole government approach on public
funding ... and public access should provide the final impetus for change,"
he said.

The Australian Government is due to respond to the 72 recommendations of the
so-called Cutler review, Venturous Australia: Building Strength in
Innovation, with a White Paper by the end of the year.

The review also recommends an increase in funding for Australia's university
research system to "at least match the proportion of GDP that was allocated
to them in the mid-1990s" and calls for more money to meet the full costs of
research at universities.


-- 
Fernando César Lima Leite
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
61-84013402
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