Open Access is the free and open availability of research outputs online. This can be achieved by two routes: by deposit of full text of the output in an institutional or subject repository (often referred to as Green open access), or immediate and openly accessible publication on publisher’s website, usually in exchange for a fee (often referred to as Gold). These two routes are not mutually exclusive.
To comply with the REF open access requirements and to be eligible for submission, King’s authors need to upload all research articles and conference proceedings with ISSN to PURE, within 90 days from acceptance. Some funders also require researchers to make their outputs open access via the Gold route, usually under the CC BY licence.
At King’s we have four block grants from external research funders to help authors make their funded papers open access. If you are acknowledging funding from British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, UKRI, or the Wellcome Trust, you can apply for block grant funding to cover open access costs by completing our funding request form.
King’s also participates in Read & Publish agreements, under which King’s corresponding authors can publish Gold open access without additional charges, and often regardless of the funding that contributed to the paper. To see the list of participating publishers and check the eligibility criteria, please see our guidance page.
The situation in regard to Open Access publishing of books and monographs remains fluid. To date, comparatively few scholarly books and book chapters have been published Open Access, but a need and interest in Open Access publishing of long form outputs is growing, and the range of options for making scholarly books and book chapters open access is increasing. For further information on open access for books and monographs, please see our page.