Academics worldwide will soon be celebrating International Open
Access Week, from October 24 to 30. When I first blogged about Open Access in
2012, the movement had been likened to the Arab Spring, having been referred to
as an “Academic Spring”. Since then, it has picked up momentum, as can be seen
from the Web site of International
Open Access Week.
Events are taking place globally in celebration of this
movement opposing traditional, commercial publishing. Workshops, presentations,
seminars, discussions and conferences are actively promoting Open Access, and a
number of Arab countries have become involved over the years, including Algeria,
Egypt, Tunisia and Saudi Arabia. Online groups have formed in celebration -
from Egypt to Taiwan, and from Portugal to Tanzania. In Glasgow, Creative
Commons UK will be launched as part of the celebratory week, another
interesting development.
New terms are gradually being coined to refer to various
aspects of the open access movement: gratis
open access versus libre open access;
gold open access; hybrid open access; delayed open access, etc. I will not bore you with the differences
now as some readers may not care and others may find this unnecessarily
complicated. For those interested, these concepts may be worth following up.
The Directory of Open Access
Journals has a news section where you may read up on the various
developments. Currently, for example, it shows an article on the open access
strategy in Algeria: academic researchers are involved, and the Ministry of
Higher Education and Scientific Research is in favour. Interestingly, the
Directory includes the Lebanese Science
Journal, published by the National Council for Scientific Research, which
was added in July 2016, including articles in English and French, and this
journal is not the first. UNESCO notes that the DOAJ indexed a Lebanese journal
in 2015, Journal of Numerical Mathematics
and Stochastics published by Euclidean Press, and that a few other OA
journals are published in Lebanon. Additionally, UNESCO states that the
Lebanese Library Association supports the OA movement through a variety of
activities that promote it among faculty, students and librarians (Global
Open Access Portal). However, UNESCO identifies challenges for the Arab world,
including lack of OA journals in Arabic, lack of staff qualified to manage OA databases,
insufficient government regulation and donor mandates, and general lack of
awareness.
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