​Open Access

The Open Access (OA) movement is based upon the key principle that publicly funded research should be made publicly available and as widely accessible as possible. Open Access material is online and free at the point of access, without barriers such as subscription or registration. There is significant evidence to suggest that publishing your work Open Access leads to wider readership, increased downloads and ultimately more citations.

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Read the University’s Open Research Policy (Open Access)

Read the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Open Research Policy (Open Access)

Read the Research Excellence Framework (REF) OA Policy

Research England have stated that the REF 2021 OA Policy should be followed until the release of an updated policy (expected in late 2024 or 2025). The core principle of the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021 open access policy is that journal articles and conference proceedings with ISSNs must be available in an open access form to be eligible for the next REF. Crucially authors’ accepted manuscripts must have been deposited in an institutional or subject repository within three months of acceptance. The REF 2021 OA Policy does allow the following publisher embargo periods to be observed once the paper is deposited:

  • 12 months for REF Main Panels A and B (mainly STEM subject areas)
  • 24 months for REF Main Panels C and D (mainly HASS subject areas)

The REF 2021 OA Policy does not currently apply to monographs, book chapters, working papers, creative or practice-based research outputs or data. If your chosen journal is not compliant with these requirements please contact researchpolicy@lboro.ac.uk for advice. Find out more about the Research Excellence Framework.

 

Read your funder's OA policy (if they have one)

The OA policies for major º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ funders are available below:

A new UKRI Open Access policy is in effect from 1 April 2022.

Researchers are now expected to publish their UKRI Research Council funded peer-reviewed articles and conference papers in journals compliant with the UKRI Research Councils' Policy on Open Access. The policy also specifies that all papers must include information on the funding that supported the research and how to access any underlying research materials such as data, samples or models.

Use the Journal Checker Tool to see if your chosen journal is compliant with the UKRI Policy.

The SHERPA Juliet service also provides a searchable database of funders' policies and their requirements on open access, publication and data archiving. Use the compliance checker tool to see how compliant a particular journal might be with Plan S.

Non-compliance with funding conditions could potentially affect future grants. Some funders require authors to publish with journals offering a Gold OA option (see below), which may carry associated Article Processing Charges (APCs). If this is the case, check the funding terms to ascertain whether provision has been made for paying these costs. If not, alternative provision will need to be made for covering these costs. If you are funded by a UK Research Council you may be able to access funding the University receives towards these charges, however please note that funds are limited and allocated on a first come first served basis.

Apply for funding

From 1st April 2022 we are operating a new and revised allocation policy to supplement the revised UKRI Open Access Policy. Please read the UKRI Block Grant Allocation Policy 2022/23 before applying for funding and contact repository@lboro.ac.uk if you have any questions. Please note that this policy may be subject to further revision.

Please ensure that you complete the Research Councils Open Access Funding Request form, ideally before submitting your paper to a journal. Funding cannot be allocated and guaranteed unless a form has been completed, checked and approved. Please do not agree to any gold open access charges prior to having a gold open access request approved. 

Check that the journal you intend to publish in is compliant with your funder's OA Policy

Publisher policies may be available via the SHERPA Romeo Service or you can contact the publisher directly. Papers published under the Gold OA route must be published under the CC BY licence, the terms of which include unrestricted re-use of content (with proper attribution). If you are not happy with making your work available under the terms of this licence please consider using the Green OA route instead.

Further guidance on publishing licences is available here.

Deposit your published outputs in the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Research Repository

Outputs should be deposited into the Research Repository via the º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ Publications Information (LUPIN) system within three months of the output being accepted (post-peer review but before the publisher's formatting and copy-editing has been added). Your research output must be deposited in line with the requirements above but it does not have to be open access immediately. Some funders allow embargo periods.

Further guidance on deposit is available here.

Routes to Open Access (Green and Gold)

There are two main routes for authors to make their papers Open Access (OA):

  • Green OA: authors publish a copy in a journal or elsewhere in the traditional way, and then self-archive in an Open Access repository, such as the University’s Research Repository. The University's Open Research Policy (Open Access) requires staff to submit a copy of all academic journal articles, conference papers and book chapters to the Research Repository using the LUPIN publication system. Most publishers will permit the author-created final version to be deposited without any charges (but not usually the publisher PDF). There are also a number of 'Green Open Access journals' that offer Open Access without any payments such as Article Processing Charges (APCs) or subscription charges.
  • Gold OA: authors publish a copy of their research papers in Open Access (or hybrid) peer-reviewed academic journals or conference proceedings. Many publishers levy a significant Article Processing Charge (APC) for this. Once accepted for publication, the publisher places the final version of the research paper on their website and makes it freely available under a licence. It is important to check any licence agreements that you sign carefully to make sure that you are permitted to deposit the publisher final version in repositories without restrictions on re-use. º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ only has a central fund to cover the APC costs for UKRI funded authors.