Open Access
With the spread of the Internet came the possibility of providing easier access to scholarly research. However, much of the information was still locked behind publisher pay walls. The Open Access movement is an attempt to provide free access to as much scholarly literature as possible. "Open access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions." (Suber, 2012)
There are two types of Open Access:
Gold Standard
Articles published under gold standard open access are published by established academic publishers. Typically, authors or granting agencies pay the publishers to release accepted publications as open access. Publishing fees can sometimes be funded by the researcher's grant.
Green Standard
Articles published under green standard open access are typically made available by the authors on an institutional repository, university website, or personal website. TWU is moving towards establishing an institutional repository to facilitate the archiving of academic publications. Many granting agencies now require publicly funded research to be released as an open access document within a year of publication. See the Tri-Agency link below for an example of the requirements for Canadian Government-funded research.
Further information
Suber, P. (2012). Open access. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
Further Reading
Berger, M., & Cirasella, J. (2015). Beyond Beall’s List Better understanding predatory publishers. College & Research Libraries News, 76(3), 132-135.
Beaubien, S., & Eckard, M. (2014). Addressing faculty publishing concerns with open access journal quality indicators. Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication, 2 (2), 8.
Butler, D. (2013). The dark side of publishing. Nature, 495(7442), 433-435.
Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) Identifying and avoiding predatory publishers: a primer for researchers.
Eger, T., Mertens, A., & Scheufen, M. (2021). Publication cultures and the citation impact of open access. Managerial and Decision Economics, 42(8), 1980-1998.
Gillis, Alex. (2017). Beware! Academics are getting reeled in by scam journals. University Affairs.
Kennedy MS. Predatory Publishing Is No Joke. Am J Nurs. 2015;115(4):7 9
Mills, M. (2020). Global trends in open access publication and open data. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics, 21(12), 4.
With the increase in open access publishing has come a corresponding increase in what University of Colorado librarian Jeffrey Beall calls "predatory open access" publishers. These are "publishers" whose primary goal is to make money by charging unwary scholars to publish their research in online publications of dubious academic rigour. The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), an organization that vets open access journals, is more diplomatic, preferring to call them "questionable" journals.
Recognizing Predatory Open Access
Getting Help
If you have questions about the quality of a publisher, feel free to contact Qinqin Zhang or Bill Badke and we'll be glad to help.
In January 15, 2017, Beall's List was removed from the web, reportedly because of threats of litigation by the groups it targeted.
Beall's original list with additional updates was relaunched at https://beallslist.net/ (not updated since December 2021 but still useful.) The more helpful site - https://www.immunofrontiers.com/list-of-predatory-journals-and-trusted-resources-2022 - has been permanently deactivated.
The DOAJ "whitelist" is still a valuable tool in determining the quality of an open access journal.
Further Reading
Badke W. Predators in our midst. (2023). Computers in Libraries.43(8):43-44.
Beall, J. (2017). What I learned from predatory publishers. Biochemia Medica, 27(2), 273-278.
Berger, M., & Cirasella, J. (2015). Beyond Beall’s List Better understanding predatory publishers. College & Research Libraries News, 76(3), 132-135.
Beaubien, S., & Eckard, M. (2014). Addressing faculty publishing concerns with open access journal quality indicators. Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication, 2(2), 8.
Butler, D. (2013). The dark side of publishing. Nature, 495(7442), 433-435.
Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) Identifying and avoiding predatory publishers: a primer for researchers.
Eger, T., Mertens, A., & Scheufen, M. (2021). Publication cultures and the citation impact of open access. Managerial and Decision Economics, 42(8), 1980-1998.
Gillis, Alex. (2017, January 12). Beware! Academics are getting reeled in by scam journals. University Affairs.
Kennedy MS. Predatory Publishing Is No Joke. Am J Nurs. 2015;115(4):7 9
Mills, M. (2020). Global trends in open access publication and open data. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics, 21(12), 4.
Pickler, R., Noyes, J., Perry, L., Roe, B., Watson, R., & Hayter, M. (2014). Authors and readers beware the dark side of Open Access. Journal of Advanced Nursing 71(10), 2221-2223.
If you are publishing with Sage journals, they offer APCs (article processing charges) discount for publishing in their pure gold open access journals, under our CRKN consortium agreement. The APCs are waived for Sage's hybrid open access journals. See the document below for the CRKN-SAGE Open Access Portal guidelines, where you will see the detailed workflow process for authors who publish in Sage open access journals. If you have any questions regarding open access publishing with Sage journals, email Qinqin Zhang at the Library.
Land Acknowledgement
Trinity Western University's Langley campus is located on the traditional, ancestral, unceded territory of the Stó:lō people. We are grateful for the opportunity to live, work, and learn on this land.