Open Access publishing
Open Access explained
If a journal article is made openly accessible it means that anyone, anywhere can have free, unrestricted, online access to it in perpetuity. In addition, the content is searchable through online search engines. Open Access publishing is not vanity or self-publishing. It relies on peer-review and traditional editorial processes, and there is no suggestion that repositories should replace journals.
Increasingly, research funders are requiring that the results of publicly funded research must be made openly accessible. UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) policy is that peer-reviewed research articles which acknowledge Research Council support and are accepted for publication should be made openly accessible. NIHR and The Wellcome Trust have similar policies in place.
- Research funder policies make Open Access publishing compulsory
- Open Access publishing - gold or green
- Reading list on Open Access
- Choosing a publisher and journal
- Author Rights Retention Policy - active from 15 April 2024!
- Funding for Gold Open Access publishing
- Benefits
- Depositing your papers in the University of Bradford repository - Bradford Scholars
Definitions of Open Access
Policies
Useful links
Keeping up to date
Help
- Creative Commons licenses
- UKRI funding information
- Sherpa/FACT compliance tool
- SHERPA JULIET
- SHERPA RoMEO
- Wellcome Trust author guide
Help at Bradford
Depositing your papers in the University of Bradford repository - Bradford Scholars
All papers intended for the Bradford Scholars repository are submitted via the University's Research Information System (RIS). Each researcher has their own RIS profile they can log into in order to submit papers to Bradford Scholars. Instructions on how to do this are available on the RaIS intranet pages.
Deposit via email ([email protected]) will ONLY be accepted from those researchers who do not have a RIS profile.
Support for the RIS is handled via [email protected].