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Explore Open Access Publishing through the Library

by Liz Svoboda on 2025-10-16T11:53:00-04:00 in Scholarly Publishing & Activity | 0 Comments

Published on behalf of Matt Wolverton, Head of Collections and Technical Services.


Open access publishing has become a popular, if not trendy, movement in academic publishing. Ideally, open access publishing provides valuable content at no cost to readers, breaking down the paywall barriers that exist for individuals that don’t have access to academic resources through their institution. Research and writing could be more broadly disseminated potentially reaching a greater audience of individuals outside of the academy. However, in practice this has shifted the cost from the reader to the writer, and oftentimes these fees to publish, called Article Processing Charges or APCs, are costly.

"Publishing models are often complex. Regardless of where one stands on debates about the open access publishing model, researchers need to know that publishing open access, in high quality journals, will likely lead to more visibility, citations, and distribution of their work. Critically, scholars need options for paying high article process charges which often exceed $3000 per manuscript... Lack of funding for open access can lead to disparities in the recognition and dissemination of important scholarship based on one’s academic discipline alone. Providing support for open access is also a service to society in general, as it makes valuable science more available to the public. Moreover, contracts and publishing agreements may not be completely transparent or understandable, especially for novice authors... knowing that the library is a source of up-to-date information about open access publishing is very valuable." -- Elizabeth R. Eisenhauer, PhD., MLS, RN, UM-Flint School of Nursing

 

Libraries have traditionally provided content for institutions of higher education. We subscribed to the print journals and bought the physical books. This transitioned to maintaining vast arrays of online journals and databases along with leasing and purchasing ebooks, if available to us. In the print world, we subscribed to individual journals. In the electronic world, we largely subscribe to “big deals”, large packages of journals offered by publishers at comparably high costs. The Thompson Library has “big deals”, maintained collaboratively with various libraries in Ann Arbor along with Dearborn), with Elsevier, Sage, Wiley, Taylor & Francis, the American Chemical Society, Springer and others.

Increasingly, when these contracts renew we have been negotiating APC discounts and waivers for University of Michigan authors. A couple new and notable additions to our discount array are:

  • American Chemical Society - University Library negotiated a Read  Green agreement with the American Chemical Society (ACS) which covers all three campuses.  This agreement allows University of Michigan authors publishing in ACS hybrid journals the option to deposit their accepted manuscript into a repository with no embargo and a Creative Commons license of their choice (CC BY or CC BY-NC-ND). There is no fee for authors to participate in this program. 
  • SpringerNature - The Big Ten Academic Alliance, of which the University of Michigan is a member, negotiated an agreement so that authors from all three campuses can now publish their articles open access in Springer hybrid journals at no cost. Articles accepted for publication between April 1, 2025 and December 31, 2026 are eligible. The agreement covers Springer and imprints including Adis, Birkhauser, and Palgrave Macmillan but does not include Nature journals (see title list PDF).

A full list of agreements available to the active UM-Flint community may be found on our Scholarly Publishing & Activity guide for Faculty. UM-Ann Arbor’s full list of agreements is available here: APC Discounts for U-M authors. Please be aware that not all of these agreements cover Flint.

"In 2020 I had an article accepted in the journal Central European History, published by Cambridge University Press. After the article was accepted, I noticed that the UM library was able to cover the article publishing charges to make the article open access. The paperwork was really simple. The article was published in 2021 and even though I have published in higher-ranked journals, it is still the article that people talk to me about when they see me at conferences and it is also taught in classes in many universities. I have no doubt whatsoever that publishing the article open access brought much more visibility to my article. And it was a completely unexpected bonus that the UM library covered the open access fees, which otherwise would have been burdensome to take on myself. I highly recommend that UM-Flint faculty members look for opportunities to take advantage of this perk." -- Christopher Molnar, PhD., UM-Flint College of Arts, Sciences, and Education

 

To explore some of these options and learn about avoiding predatory journals and more, check out our upcoming webinar "Where Should I Publish My Article? Finding the Right Journal and Avoiding Predatory Journals & Conferences" on Friday, October 24 at noon. Register through Campus Connections.

 


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