ARTÍCULO
Open access perpetuates differences between higher- and lower-income countries
Fecha
2022Autor
Payo Payo, Ana
Santidrián Tomillo, Pilar
Zandoná, Eugenia
Iñamagua Uyaguari, Juan Pablo
Institución
Resumen
When a group of concerned scientists
initiated the Open Access (OA) movement in 2001 with the Budapest Open
Access Initiative (https://www.budap
estopenaccessinitiative.org), their primary objective was to facilitate free and
universal access to scientific articles
through the elimination of readers’ subscription fees. For authors, the increased
visibility and impact associated with OA
papers came at the expense of high publication costs. Twenty years later, the
number of OA science journals has skyrocketed (Piwowar et al. 2018), including
those focused on ecological research.
Now, many traditional ecology journals
(those that have not become fully OA)
offer OA options as hybrid journals, and
funding agencies help cover the publication fees associated with OA (referred to
as article publication or processing
charges), which may add up to several
thousand dollars per paper.