Publication | Closed Access
The Access/Impact Problem and the Green and Gold Roads to Open Access
264
Citations
5
References
2004
Year
EngineeringAccess/impact ProblemSmart CityUnited KingdomDigital ArchiveSocial SciencesJournalismImpact FactorAccess ControlArchivingArticles Open AccessCitation AnalysisTransport InfrastructurePublic PolicyResearch Access/impact ProblemOpen AccessUrban PlanningResearch Data ArchivingInfrastructure DevelopmentArchival StudiesGold RoadsScience And Technology StudiesTechnologyMobility Service
The research access/impact problem arises because journal articles are not accessible to all of their would-be users; hence, they are losing potential research impact. The solution is to make all articles Open Access (OA; i.e., accessible online, free for all). OA articles have significantly higher citation impact than non-OA articles. There are two roads to OA: the “golden” road (publish your article in an OA journal) and the “green” road (publish your article in a non-OA journal but also self-archive it in an OA archive). Only 5% of journals are gold, but over 90% are already green (i.e., they have given their authors the green light to self-archive); yet only about 10–20% of articles have been self-archived. To reach 100% OA, self-archiving needs to be mandated by researchers' employers and funders, as the United Kingdom and the United States have recently recommended, and universities need to implement that mandate.
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