Science and Research Content

Plan S architects explain how grantees can abide by initiative’s rules by 2020 -

The architects of Plan S, a contentious plan to tear down scholarly journals' paywalls in Europe, have laid out more details on how the initiative will work.

In a recently published seven-page implementation guidance note, funders backing the plan, including the European Research Council, national agencies in France, the Netherlands and the UK, as well as private funders including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, explain how grantees can abide by Plan S rules by 2020, when it goes into effect.

The note says that, aside from publishing in an open access journal or platform, researchers can comply with Plan S by publishing in a subscription journal provided they also make a peer reviewed version immediately available in a repository. Many top journals do not allow this until at least six months after publication.

Grantees will be permitted to publish in so-called hybrid journals, which charge a subscription but make some articles free to view, but only if the journal has committed to transform into a fully open access model.

John-Arne Røttingen, head of the Research Council of Norway, and David Sweeney, executive chair of Research England, together led the task force that developed the implementation guidance.

The note promises an independent study on article processing charges, the fees charged by journals to run papers in an open access format. Under Plan S these charges, which the initiative pledges to cap, will be met by funders or universities, rather than authors.

Researchers can provide feedback on the implementation guidelines until February 1, 2019.

Plan S is being met with scepticism from a growing number of established scientists. Earlier this month, an open letter, now signed by about 1,400 scientists, slammed the initiative because it 'goes too far, is unfair for the scientists involved and is too risky for science in general.'

Signatories to the letter, including two Nobel laureates, Ben Feringa and Arieh Warshel, say the ban on so-called hybrid journals envisaged by Plan S is 'a big problem, especially for chemistry', as it would prevent scientists from publishing in journals that are important for their career progression.

In the current publishing system, scientists are judged by where they have published when they compete for jobs, promotions, tenure and grant money.

The guidance leaves room for hybrid journals, as long as they sign 'transformative agreements' by the end of 2021, pledging to flip to full open access within three years. The terms of this arrangement, however, need to be spelt out further, the League of European Research Universities (LERU) said in a statement. The universities' association backs the plan, but is urging more funders to sign up.

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