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 ** Cross-Posted: Apologies if you receive more than one copy **

This is the English translation of yesterday's timely and incisive analysis
of what is at stake in the question of *locus of deposit* (institutional vs.
central) for open access self-archiving mandates universities and research
funders. It was written (and translated into English) by Prof. Bernard
Rentier, Rector of the University of Liège and founder of
EurOpenScholar<http://recteur.blogs.ulg.ac.be/?p=151>.
It is re-posted here from Prof. Rentier's blog<http://recteur.blogs.ulg.ac.be/>
.

For more background on the important issues underlying the question of
institutional vs. central deposit mandates by institutions and funders, click
here<http://blogsearch.google.ca/blogsearch?hl=en&num=100&c2coff=1&safe=active&ie=UTF-8&q=institutional+central+blogurl%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fopenaccess.eprints.org%2F&btnG=Search+Blogs>
.
*
Liège<http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/fullinfo.php?inst=Universit%C3%A9%20de%20Li%C3%A8ge>
is
one of the c. 30 institutions (plus 30 funders) worldwide that have already
adopted a Green OA self-archiving
mandate<http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/>
*.*

------------------------------

Repositories: Institutional, Thematic, or
Central?<http://recteur.blogs.ulg.ac.be/?p=248>

Posted by Bernard Rentier in Open Access<http://recteur.blogs.ulg.ac.be/?cat=10>

(Also recommended: a remarkable and very complete review of OA by Peter
Suber <http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/02-02-09.htm>.)

The "Green Open Access
(OA)"<http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/accessdebate/21.html>
solution,
providing free access to research publications in Institutional Repositories
(IRs)<http://roar.eprints.org/?action=home&q=&country=&version=&type=institutional&order=name&submit=Filter>
via
the Web, is certainly the
best<http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/494-guid.html>
one,
but sooner or later it will face a new wave of centralised thematic or
funder repositories
(CRs)<http://roar.eprints.org/?action=home&q=&country=&version=&type=subject&order=name&submit=Filter>
.

The latest initiative comes from the very active
EUROHORCs<http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/fullinfo.php?inst=European%20Heads%20of%20Research%20Councils%20%28EUROHORCs%29>
(European
Association of Heads of Research Funding Organisations and Research
Performing Organisations), well known for its EURYI
prizes<http://www.esf.org/activities/euryi.html> and
its prominent influence on European thinking in the research area. EUROHORCs
is working to convince the European Science Foundation
(ESF)<http://www.esf.org/> to
set up, through a large subsidy from the
EC<http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/fullinfo.php?inst=European%20Commission%20-%202>,
a centralised repository (CR) which would be both thematic (Biomedical) and
local (European). The concept is inspired by PubMed
Central<http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/>,
among others.

The EUROHORCs initiative is very well-intentioned. It is based on an
awareness that many of us share: It is of the utmost importance that science
funded by public money should be made freely and easily accessible to the
public (OA). But the initiative also reveals a profound misunderstanding
about what OA and researchers' real needs are all about.

The vision underlying the EUROHORCs initiative is that research results
should be deposited directly in a CR. However, if research results are not
OA today, this is not because of the lack of a CR to deposit them in, but
rather because most authors are simply not yet depositing their articles at
all<http://elpub.scix.net/cgi-bin/works/Show?_id=178_elpub2008&sort=DEFAULT&search=%22ELPUB%3a2008%22&hits=52>,
not even in an IR.

Creating a new repository is hence not the solution for making research OA. The
solution lies in universal deposit
mandates<http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/>,
from both institutions and funding agencies. If this task is left to large
funders such as the European Community, their central repositories will only
contain publications of the research they have funded. From this it is easy
to see that researchers will ultimately have to deposit their publications
in as many repositories as there are funders supporting their research. Not
only is this not practical, it is needlessly cumbersome.

The obvious solution is that both research institutions and funding agencies
should jointly require IR deposit. Once that systematic coordination has
been successfully implemented, if CRs are desired, they can easily be
created and filled using
compatiblesoftware<http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/repositories/digirep/index/SWORD>
for
exporting or harvesting automatically from IRs to CRs.

What is worrisome is the needless double investment in creating two distinct
kinds of repositories for direct deposit. This trend seems to rest on the
naive notion that, in the Internet era, it is somehow still necessary to
deposit things centrally. But in reality, the centralising tool is the
harvester <http://www.openarchives.org/>, and its search
engine<http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/b/bib/bib-idx?c=oaister;page=simple>
. Google Scholar <http://scholar.google.com/schhp?hl=en&tab=ws>, for
example, is quite efficient in finding articles in any repository,
institutional or central, yet no one deposits articles directly in Google
Scholar. The perceived need for direct-deposit CRs is groundless,
technically speaking. Such CRs even run the risk of serving as hosts for
only the publications funded by a single funder. IRs guarantee OA webwide
for all research output, in all disciplines, from all institutions,
regardless of where (or whether) it has been funded.

It is understandable that funders may wish to host a complete collection of
the research they have funded, but nowadays that can easily be accomplished
by importing it automatically from the more complete collections of the
distributed IRs -- since institutions are the universal providers of all
research output, funded and unfunded -- as long as funders collaborate with
institutions in first ensuring that all the IRs are filled with their own
institutional research output.

Besides, the OA philosophy is global. It cannot be reduced to a single
continent. Science is universal.

Giving priority to creating more CRs for direct deposit today is not only a
waste of time: it is also counterproductive for the growth of
convergent<http://openaccess.eprints.org/index.php?/archives/414-guid.html>
funder
and institutional mandates. It would generate multiple competing loci of
primary deposit for authors -- most of whom, we must not forget, are still
not depositing at all.

In conclusion, it seems far more efficient to focus first on filling IRs at
this time; once that is accomplished, if it is judged useful, CRs can be
configured to collect their data from IRs rather than being used as
divergent points of direct deposits themselves.

The potential success of OA, without conflicting head-on with publishers,
rests on the deposit of authors' own final drafts of their published
articles, through a one-time, simple
action<http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/10688/> on
the part of the author. All research is generated from research
institutions: IRs are hence the natural locus for author deposit, providing
optimal proximity, convenience and congruence with the mission of the
author's own institution. The rest is merely technical: a matter of
automated data transfer to external CRs.

The EUROHORCs proposal is only worthwhile if it contributes to the secondary
harvesting of data from primary IRs. Otherwise, it is missing the point of
OA.

ORBi wins its challenge

U. Liège's IR "ORBi<http://roar.eprints.org/index.php?action=search&query=orbi&submit=Search>"
(Open Repository and Bibliography) is fulfilling its promise: over 4,000
references have already been filed since November 26th and, in a happy
surprise, 79% of these articles turn out to be full text. This is thus ahead
of schedule for our institutionalGreen OA
Mandate<http://www.eprints.org/openaccess/policysignup/fullinfo.php?inst=Universit%C3%A9%20de%20Li%C3%A8ge>
(announced
in March 2007 to take effect in October 2009): "Whenever the university
reviews faculty publications for promotion, tenure, funding, or any other
internal purpose, the review will be based exclusively on full texts
deposited in the IR."

This graph <http://recteur.blogs.ulg.ac.be/wp-content/files/Orbi.jpg> shows
clearly how the IR contents are growing. And yet a quick calculation also
reminds us that we are still far from capturing the actual number of papers
published yearly by our university authors.

*