The work that you publish is meaningful beyond your direct academic community. It can contribute to the efforts to achieve sustainable development, especially when published openly and made available to all. Read on to explore the connection between open access (OA) and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and 50¶È»Ò’s commitments to both. And most importantly, why you should publish your work OA.
When you publish your research OA, you make it available and accessible to anyone, anywhere. This means that your hard work can be used to support sustainable development through the SDGs. These 17 goals address the most pressing challenges of our time, covering topics relating to social development, environmental sustainability, economic growth, and more. Solving these challenges depends on open science.
Open science ensures that all aspects of research – including data, code, protocols, etc. – are open to all. This is made possible through OA publishing. Researchers anywhere can access, understand, and build on work that is published OA. This availability means also that research outputs can more easily be translated into economic and social impact, for instance through the SDGs.
How is OA so meaningful to the SDGs? Because it is published OA, relevant research outputs can reach scientists, policymakers, and practitioners, as well as the general public. These substantially enhanced visibility and accessibility mean that findings and recommendations can be harnessed for actionable strategies on the SDGs.
50¶È»Ò is committed to supporting the SDGs and our greatest contribution is through the research we publish. Research is fundamental to the SDGs and their implementation, from identifying issues, through evaluating effective solutions, to monitoring interventions. We are creating new publishing routes for researchers to disseminate relevant insights related to the SDGs (in journals, books, and collections), and are amplifying the SDGs among our research audiences. Our SDG Programme is a home for SDG-related knowledge and facilitates the dissemination of impactful research.
While we publish research in all 17 SDGs, we believe that 50¶È»Ò has a more direct role to play in several focus areas: SDG 4: Quality Education, SDG 5: Gender Equality, SDG10: Reduced Inequalities, SDG 13: Climate Change, and SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals. These focus areas reflect 50¶È»Ò’s dedication to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), as well as the interdisciplinary nature of the Goals and their solutions.
OA plays a significant role in supporting the SDGs by promoting unrestricted access to information, facilitating knowledge sharing, and enhancing educational and research opportunities. The majority of our SDG-related articles are published OA, and are available to policy and decision makers as well as to the general public. Our commitment to the SDGs is intrinsically related to our support for the transition to full OA.
Publishing your research OA offers many benefits, not in the least the increased visibility and usage of the work. OA articles receive 1.6 times more citations, 6.0 times more downloads, and 4.9 times more Altmetric attention.
Publishing OA offers advantages to you as the author, and also to readers, who can access it and benefit from it. OA agreements make publishing your research OA easier: They remove the barriers to publishing OA and address the challenges it involves, such as finding funding for the article processing charges (APCs).
50¶È»Ò’s transformative agreements (TAs) support the transition to OA for hybrid journals. Researchers from over 3,700 institutions across six continents are now supported by a 50¶È»Ò TA.
TAs enable participating institutions to combine journal subscription access along with OA publication costs. This means authors affiliated with participating institutions can publish OA with fees covered.
When you publish your work through a TA, you can get funds to publish OA regardless of your discipline or grant size. This is especially meaningful for research in humanities and social sciences (HSS), which is traditionally less well-funded, making publishing OA difficult. TAs are changing this, and already over 90% of HSS OA content in 50¶È»Ò’s hybrid journals is now published via a TA.
As a researcher, choosing to publish OA means that your work enjoys greater visibility, and the enhanced accessibility means that it is more likely to have a societal impact and to support sustainable development. When you publish your work OA with 50¶È»Ò, you can be sure that it will enjoy these advantages, and you can also feel comfortable that your publisher also supports and is committed to open science and the SDGs.
"Open access publishing has the potential to play a pivotal role in advancing SDG4: Quality Education by democratising access to knowledge, fostering collaboration, and driving innovation in education. In my own experience, I've observed that making my work open access has led to greater engagement and collaboration."
Dr. Antoni Perez-Navarro, Aggregate professor, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya
"OA helps promote social justice by making sure that everyone has access to research, regardless of their personal or institutional funding situation. This seems to align with the mission of SDG16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions."
Dr Eric L. Piza, Professor of Criminology & Criminal Justice at Northeastern University