Flinders University Library supports open access to research, ensuring that research outputs are freely available to everyone. This is achieved in two ways:
The University's Open Access Policy requires that research outputs (including non-traditional research outputs) be made open access unless there is a valid reason not to. Researchers can choose the open access route that is most suitable to their research, while also meeting any obligations linked to grant funding.
Why Open Access matters
Open access promotes global equity by removing barriers to accessing research. It ensures that knowledge is available to everyone, regardless of their location or resources.
Flinders University supports open and ethical research practices, aligning with:
ResearchNow can be used to make article manuscripts open access at no cost and to showcase a variety of research, including non-traditional research outputs
Use the ROADS repository at Flinders to make your research datasets open access and reusable by others.
Have your reports hosted by Flinders with a stable DOI and a registered ISBN to aid in discoverability.
View offers available for free and discounted open access publishing options in selected journals.
Attend a library workshop to learn more about publishing open access, avoiding predatory publishers, and sharing all kinds of outputs.
Flinders University encourages researchers to learn about, adopt and encourage open research practices, where relevant or possible.
Open access to research outputs offers several benefits:
International Open Access Week is celebrated in the third week of October every year. It aims to raise awareness about the importance of making research information freely available to everyone.
Flinders University Library supports Open Access through Read & Publish agreements, as well as support and training for researchers using our Open Access repositories.
In 2024, Open Access Week was held from October 21-27. A recording is available of the keynote event, ‘Coffee, cake & Open Access: A researcher Q&A discussion’, which was held on Tuesday October 22nd in the Alere Function Centre.
This event included a keynote address from Pro Vice-Chancellor (Research Performance and Impact), Professor Vincent Bulone, followed by a welcome address from Mr Prashant Pandey (Director of Library Services).
Both speakers then joined an engaging panel discussion moderated by Ms Liz Walkley Hall (Library Associate Director, Engagement and Scholarly Communications) and featuring Professor Tim Cavagnaro, Professor Raj Shekhawat, and Professor Sharyn Roach Anleu.
A recording is also available of the 2023 Open Access Week Launch Event, which celebrated the launch of the University’s new Open Access Policy.
Open Access infographic – Click to enlarge.
By Ginny Barbour, Stephanie Bradbury,
Paula Callan & Anne Walsh. CC-BY-NC.
Researchers who have received grant funding should ensure they are aware of their funding body’s open access mandates and choose publishing avenues that comply with their grant conditions.
ARC and NHMRC advise against relying on the use of commercial, social media platforms such as ResearchGate and Academia.edu as a way for meeting open access compliance requirements. Visit the open access policy requirements from ARC and NHMRC for more information.
Recipients of an Australian Research Council grant will need to comply with the ARC Open Access Policy that requires most publications to be made open access within 12 months from publication date. For journal articles, this is preferably through depositing your accepted manuscript to be made open access at no cost through ResearchNow, or in an openly accessible public digital archive. You may also be able to publish open access at no cost by choosing a journal eligible for waived fees under a library Read & Publish agreement.
All NHMRC grant holders are subject to the NHMRC Open Access Policy. It requires that all peer reviewed publications are published open access immediately, with a Creative Commons Attribution licence allowing reuse by others. There are several avenues through which this can be achieved:
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