<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title>Episciences.org TEI export of elpub:5561 - ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing, 2019-06-11, Academic publishing and digital bibliodiversity</title></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>CCSD - Episciences</distributor><availability status="restricted"><licence target="https://about.hal.science/hal-authorisation-v1">Hal authorisation v1</licence></availability><date when="2019-06-11"/></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><p>Episciences.org API platform</p></sourceDesc></fileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><listBibl><biblFull><titleStmt><title xml:lang="en">If, Alongside Libraries, Funders Pulled Their Weight: A Study in Universal Open Access</title><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">John</forename><surname>Willinsky</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-0"/></author></titleStmt><editionStmt><edition><date type="whenSubmitted">2019-06-11 08:47:54</date><date type="whenProduced">2019-06-11 09:06:02</date><ref type="file" target="http://elpub.episciences.org/5561/pdf"/></edition><respStmt><resp>contributor</resp><name key="630180"><persName><forename>OpenEdition</forename><surname>Press</surname></persName><email>press@openedition.org</email></name></respStmt></editionStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>CCSD</distributor><idno type="id">elpub:5561</idno><idno type="url">http://elpub.episciences.org/5561</idno><idno type="ref">elpub:5561 - ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing, 2019-06-11, Academic publishing and digital bibliodiversity</idno><licence target="https://about.hal.science/hal-authorisation-v1">Hal authorisation v1</licence></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><biblStruct><analytic><title xml:lang="en">If, Alongside Libraries, Funders Pulled Their Weight: A Study in Universal Open Access</title><author role="aut"><persName><forename type="first">John</forename><surname>Willinsky</surname></persName><email/><affiliation ref="#struct-0"/></author></analytic><monogr><idno type="HAL">hal-02143129</idno><title level="j">ElPub - ELectronic PUBlishing</title><imprint><publisher/><biblScope unit="volume">Academic publishing and digital bibliodiversity</biblScope><biblScope unit="issue">Short Papers</biblScope><date type="datePub">2019-06-11T09:06:02+02:00</date></imprint></monogr><idno type="doi">10.4000/proceedings.elpub.2019.10</idno></biblStruct></sourceDesc><profileDesc><langUsage><language ident="en">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="author"><term>Open access</term><term>Scholarly publishing economics</term><term>Research funding</term><term>[SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences</term></keywords></textClass><abstract><p>International audience</p></abstract><abstract xml:lang="en"><p>This demonstration study sets out the way in which a model for open access can work in which funders pay the portion of publishing costs associated with the articles that acknowledge research funder. Using the field of anthropology, this analysis presents the participation incentives and advantages behind of an open access model in which a journal article’s publication costs are paid by either (a) the research funder(s) acknowledged by the article or, if without a funder, (b) the libraries whose patrons read and utilize the research. Using both hypothetical and actual examples, the paper describes how the existing metadata systems such as Crossref’s Open Funder Registry can be utilized to automate the implementation of the model. It also addresses the model’s economic impact, from an initial pilot study to large-scale implementation, for the principal stakeholders in scholarly communication.</p></abstract></profileDesc></biblFull></listBibl></body><back><listOrg><org xml:id="struct-0"><idno type="ROR">https://ror.org/00f54p054</idno><orgName>Stanford University</orgName></org></listOrg></back></text></TEI>