The Faculty of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University has voted to publish scholarly articles by the faculty for free online.
While its ways are sometimes criticized as opaque, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences took a big step towards openness yesterday, passing a motion that will allow Harvard to freely distribute scholarly articles produced by FAS professors.
The motion, which passed easily at yesterday's Faculty meeting, grants Harvard a non-exclusive copyright over all articles produced by any current Faculty member, allowing for the creation of an online repository that would be "available to other services such as web harvesters, Google Scholar, and the like."
Professors can still submit a written request to waive the application of the policy and maintain control of their copyright even if the policy is applied, allowing them to have the articles published in scholarly journals.
Robert Darnton '60, director of the University library, emphasized the motion's importance in opening up Harvard’s resources.
"This is a way of sharing the intellectual wealth of Harvard, which is for the public good," he said. "We think it can make a very important difference in the way scholarly communication in the new digital age."
This is going to be a great new research resource. Kudos to Harvard for doing this.
Find out about the latest happenings on our network! Subscribe to the
Writers Write® Update,
our free email newsletter. Writers Write, Inc. does not sell or distribute
subscribers' email addresses to third parties.