New international coalition takes crowd-funding style approach to secure the future of open science
In an effort to strengthen and secure the network of non-commercial services that underpin the burgeoning field of Open Science, a newly-formed coalition of international organisations, including SPARC Europe, is spearheading an unconventional appeal.
The Global Sustainability Coalition for Open Science Services (SCOSS), which formed just over a year ago, is now making its first funding appeal to the global academic and research communities; a request for funding support for two widely used services: the Directory of Open Access Journals and SHERPA RoMEO. The former is an online index of open access journals while the latter is an online resource providing analyses of publisher open access policies, along with summaries of self-archiving permissions and conditions of authors rights on a journal-by-journal basis.
Both services have been vetted by the coalition. The aim is to gain three-year funding commitments from a voluntary network of institutions — the core user-base of the services. While DOAJ and SHERPA RoMEO represent the first services to be presented for community funding, SCOSS plans to accept applications from qualified services twice a year. The next call for applications will be held in early 2018.
The groundwork for SCOSS was laid by Knowledge Exchange, which presented many of the foundational ideas for the coalition in its 2016 report Putting Down Roots, Securing the Future of Open Access Policies. Many organisations have helped to shape the coalition, including the Australasian Open Access Strategy Group (AOASG), The Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR), The Council of Australian University Librarians (CAUL), The European Research Council (ERC), The European University Association (EUA), EIFL, The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA), LIBER, Science Europe and SPARC Europe. Initial input was also provided by SPARC (US).
“Our ultimate goal is to help secure an infrastructure of freely available Open Access and Science services subsidised by a community of policymakers and stakeholders,” said Vanessa Proudman, Director of SPARC Europe, a member of the SCOSS coalition. “This is one means to help ensure their independence and future.”
For more information about SCOSS, see www.scoss.org.