Duke Latest To Sign Journal Open Access Compact

Pricey subscription journals will take another hit with news that Duke University has joined a group of kindred research institutions in signing a Compact for Open Access Publishing Equity (COPE). The goal of the compact, which came into existence a little more than a year ago, is to encourage researchers to publish their peer-reviewed work in open access scholarly journals, where the material would be freely available online. Duke is the 11th signatory to sign onto the program. COPE's initial signatories included five universities: Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, MIT, and University of California, Berkeley.

According to the Directory of Open Access Journals Web site there are currently 5,468 open access journals being produced, many by institutional and association publishers. Some charge authors an article-processing fee for reviewing, editing, producing, and distributing their work, costs that would traditionally have been covered through a journal's subscription fee. For example, the American Chemical Society charges authors between $1,500 and $3,000 to make an article freely available.

To encourage the participation of its faculty in the new program, Duke has created a special fund to help pay for article processing fees. So far that same practice has been followed by each of the signatories in COPE. The fund will be administered by Duke Libraries' Office of Scholarly Communications and is supported by the libraries and the Office of the Provost.

Duke researchers can receive a maximum of $3,000 of article processing fees in an academic year. Those articles supported by a gift or grant that covers such fees aren't eligible for the reimbursement.

"By establishing this fund, we hope to support the university's commitment to promoting openness as an important value in scholarship," said Provost Peter Lange. "Increased open access means more opportunities for the research of our faculty and researchers to reach a wide audience and have a meaningful impact on the world." He added that in March 2010 the university's Academic Council had adopted an open access policy that applies to all Duke faculty.

Kevin Smith, scholarly communications officer with Duke's University Libraries, said he hopes the university's commitment will raise awareness of the growing body of open access journals. "Several open access journals, such as those in the Public Library of Science family, have quickly grown in influence and now demonstrate high impact factors in their fields," Smith said.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • handshake where one hand is human and the other is composed of glowing circuits

    Western Governors University Joins Open edX as a Mission-Aligned Organization

    Western Governors University is the first organization to join the Open edX project as a "mission-aligned organization" (MAO), a new category of institution-level partnership supporting development of the Open edX open source online learning platform.

  • The AI Show

    Register for Free to Attend the World's Greatest Show for All Things AI in EDU

    The AI Show @ ASU+GSV, held April 5–7, 2025, at the San Diego Convention Center, is a free event designed to help educators, students, and parents navigate AI's role in education. Featuring hands-on workshops, AI-powered networking, live demos from 125+ EdTech exhibitors, and keynote speakers like Colin Kaepernick and Stevie Van Zandt, the event offers practical insights into AI-driven teaching, learning, and career opportunities. Attendees will gain actionable strategies to integrate AI into classrooms while exploring innovations that promote equity, accessibility, and student success.

  • soft-edged digital blocks and AI imagery on a muted background

    OpenAI Launches GPT-4.1 with Upgrades in Coding, Context Processing, Efficiency

    OpenAI has announced GPT-4.1, offering stronger performance across software development, instruction following, and long-context comprehension.

  • glowing crystal ball with a simplified university building inside, surrounded by seamlessly blended holographic symbols of binary code, a bar graph, database icons, and a cloud, against a gradient blue and white background with softly merging circuit patterns

    3 Areas Where AI Will Impact Higher Ed Most in 2025

    What should colleges and universities expect from the evolving landscape of artificial intelligence in the coming year? Here's what the experts told us.