Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Open Access Indian Publications: An Empirical Study of DOAJ


Affiliations
1 Chandigarh University, Mohali, Punjab – 140413, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


There are two general strategies for achieving Open Access (OA) to scholarly communication, the gold road and the green road. The largest and authoritative gold road OA database is the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) indexing all the standard OA journals meeting the DOAJ criteria of inclusion. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the contribution of Indian publications to the global OA movement. The analysis of the present study was done based on a total dataset of 289 research publications of Indian OA journal as imported from the DOAJ database. The findings of the study reveal that Indian OA journals account for only 2% of the total coverage of DOAJ. Among them, journals in the field of Medicine alone account for 79% and approximately 73% of journals are published in both print & electronic medium with PDF as the preferred file format, DOI as preferred permanent article identifier and English as the preferred language of publication. Almost 89% of Indian OA journals provide full-text crawl permission, while 75% of them provide download statistics. All the Indian journals covered under DOAJ are peer-reviewed and out of them, most of the journals (76%) are double-blind peer-reviewed. Indian OA publications with CC BY-NC-SA license cover the highest percentage (75%) and 206 journals (71%) do not charge APC. In majority of Indian OA journals (89%), the author doesn’t hold either the copyright or publishing rights without restrictions from the journal publishers. It is important to note that only two journals (~1%) satisfied the requirements of DOAJ Seal.

Keywords

Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Indian Contribution to OA, Open Access, Open Access Journals, Open Access Movement, BOAI.
User
About The Author

Subhajit Panda
Chandigarh University, Mohali, Punjab – 140413
India


Notifications

  • BOAI. (2002, February 14). Budapest Open Access Initiative. Read the Budapest Open Access Initiative. Retrieved May 26, 2020, from http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/read.
  • Christian, G. E. (2008). Open access initiative and the developing world. African Journal of Library, Archives and Information Science, 18(1), 1-10. Retrieved from https://www.ajol.info//index.php/ajlais/article/view/26194.
  • Creative Commons (CC). (2016). About the Licenses - Creative Commons. Retrieved May 29, 2020, from https://creativecommons.org/licenses/.
  • Das, A. K. (2015). Module 1 Scholarly Communication. Unit 1-4. Retrieved from http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002319/231938e.pdf.
  • DOAJ (n.d.-a). Directory of Open Access Journals. Retrieved May 26, 2020, from https://doaj.org/about.
  • DOAJ (n.d.-b). Directory of Open Access Journals. What is the DOAJ Seal of Approval for Open Access Journals (the DOAJ Seal). Retrieved May 26, 2020, from https://doaj.org/faq#seal.
  • Elsevier (2019). Copyright Journal author rights, Government employees, Elsevier’s rights, Protecting author rights and Open access. Retrieved May 30, 2020, from https://www.elsevier.com/about/policies/copyright.
  • Erfanmanesh, M. (2017). Status and quality of open access journals in Scopus. Collection Building, 36(4), 155-162. https://doi.org/10.1108/cb-02-2017-0007.
  • Lange, J. (2020, May 22). Guides: Scholarly Journal Publishing (Guide: 3. Types of Review). Retrieved May 26, 2020. https://libraryguides.mcgill.ca/journalpublishing/typesofreview.
  • Pujar, S. M. (2014). Open Access Journals in Library and Information Science: A Study. Annals of Library and Information Studies, 61(3), 199-202. Retrieved from http://op.niscair.res.in/index.php/ALIS/article/view/7068/121.
  • Sahoo, J., Mohanty, B. and Sahoo, L. P. (2017). Indian contribution to open access scholarly publishing in DOAJ. Library Philosophy and Practice, 1567. Retrieved from https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/libphilprac/1567/.
  • Singh, K. and Khanchandani, V. (2015). Indian Contribution to Open Access Scholarly Publishing in Science and Technology: A Critical Study of Directory of open Access Journals (DOAJ). Library Herald, 53(3), 268-283. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.5958/0976-2469.2015.00029.9.
  • Singh, P. and Chander, H. (2018). Scholarly Open Access Publishing: Growth of LIS Open Access Journals visible through Directory of Open Access Journals. Library Philosophy and Practice, 1749. Retrieved from https://digitalcommons. unl.edu/libphilprac/1749/.
  • Wijewickrema, M. and Petras, V. (2017). Journal selection criteria in an open access environment: A comparison between the medicine and social sciences. Learned Publishing, 30(4), 289-300. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1002/leap.1113.
  • Zhang, L. and Watson, E. M. (2017). Measuring the Impact of Gold and Green Open Access. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 43(4), 337-345. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2017.06.004.

Abstract Views: 318

PDF Views: 4




  • Open Access Indian Publications: An Empirical Study of DOAJ

Abstract Views: 318  |  PDF Views: 4

Authors

Subhajit Panda
Chandigarh University, Mohali, Punjab – 140413, India

Abstract


There are two general strategies for achieving Open Access (OA) to scholarly communication, the gold road and the green road. The largest and authoritative gold road OA database is the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) indexing all the standard OA journals meeting the DOAJ criteria of inclusion. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the contribution of Indian publications to the global OA movement. The analysis of the present study was done based on a total dataset of 289 research publications of Indian OA journal as imported from the DOAJ database. The findings of the study reveal that Indian OA journals account for only 2% of the total coverage of DOAJ. Among them, journals in the field of Medicine alone account for 79% and approximately 73% of journals are published in both print & electronic medium with PDF as the preferred file format, DOI as preferred permanent article identifier and English as the preferred language of publication. Almost 89% of Indian OA journals provide full-text crawl permission, while 75% of them provide download statistics. All the Indian journals covered under DOAJ are peer-reviewed and out of them, most of the journals (76%) are double-blind peer-reviewed. Indian OA publications with CC BY-NC-SA license cover the highest percentage (75%) and 206 journals (71%) do not charge APC. In majority of Indian OA journals (89%), the author doesn’t hold either the copyright or publishing rights without restrictions from the journal publishers. It is important to note that only two journals (~1%) satisfied the requirements of DOAJ Seal.

Keywords


Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Indian Contribution to OA, Open Access, Open Access Journals, Open Access Movement, BOAI.

References