Areas within open science

The national guidelines cover the following six areas, where development is already under way and which are therefore important to prioritise and fully develop in Sweden.

Within each area, a number of goals and priorities are formulated, and actors and areas of responsibility are identified. The goals and priorities vary depending on the current situation and development within the areas.

Six areas of open science

Open access to scholarly publications

Open access to scholarly publications means that everyone who has a need for or interest in research results can access and benefit from them, regardless of financial resources or organisational affiliation. This includes researchers at universities and university colleges or other research performing organisations, professionals in the public sector such as schools and healthcare, as well as the business sector, the media, and the general public.

Making scholarly publications immediately open access creates better conditions for scientific knowledge to be disseminated and utilised more quickly and for results, methods and theories to be scrutinised, discussed, and supplemented. Open access to scholarly publications can help improve the quality, efficiency and impact of research.

Goals and priorities:

  • That all types of scholarly publications produced wholly or partially with public funds are published with immediate open access.
  • That publication takes place with an open license, in accordance with the FAIR principles, and with support from guiding information provided by KB.
  • That costs associated with open access publishing are not borne by either readers or individual authors.
  • That publishing costs are transparent and decrease over time without affecting Swedish researchers' ability to disseminate research results in the form of scholarly publications.
  • That measures are taken to promote authors retaining the economic copyright to their works.

Actors and areas of responsibility:

KB is an expert agency in the field and has been mandated by the government to coordinate, monitor, and promote collaboration in the work for open access to scholarly publications.

Research performing and research funding organisations should establish or develop policies that encompass immediate open access to all types of scholarly publications. It is also crucial that research funders’ and research performers’ policies for open access to scholarly publications are harmonised.

Costs for scholarly publishing should, to the greatest extent possible, be managed at the national level in collaboration between research performing and research funding organisations. In cases where contract negotiations occur with publishers or other service providers, this is conducted within the framework of the Bibsam Consortium on behalf of participating organisations. A common goal is to reduce publishing costs over time.

Costs for open access books are often substantial, and a specific strategy for how to handle them should be developed in collaboration between research performing and research funding organisations.

Research performing organisations have a responsibility to carry out initiatives to increase knowledge of copyright issues among researchers, teachers, students, and relevant support staff.

Research performing and research funding organisations can explore the possibility of establishing policies or strategies that promote researchers' ability to disseminate their works while complying with formal transfer of economic copyright to publishers.