4000 journals are now in the DOAJ
As of today, the Directory of Open Access Journals contains 4000 open access journals, i.e. quality controlled scientific and scholarly electronic journals that are freely available on the web. Congratulations all round.
The usage of DOAJ is constantly increasing. Every month they have more than 8 million hits; hundreds of libraries all over the world have included the DOAJ titles in their catalogues and other services and commercial aggregators are also benefiting from this service.
The goal of the Directory of Open Access Journals is still to increase the visibility and accessibility of open access scholarly journals, and thereby promote their increased usage and impact. The directory aims to comprehensively cover all open access scholarly journals that use an appropriate quality control system. Journals in about 50 languages can be found and all subject areas are welcome. The DOAJ contains journals from 98 countries and to maintain the quality of the service they have also removed titles that no longer live up to the selection criteria. - 94 titles were removed during 2008.
DOAJ is sponsored by the National Library of Sweden, INASP, Swedish Library Association, Lund University.
In February 2007 a membership program was launched in order to create a sustainable financial foundation for the continuing operation and development of DOAJ. Today DOAJ has 13 individuals, 80 libraries, universities and research centers, 10 library consortia and 2 aggregators as members. Thanks to all of them for their support!
April 1, 2009 No Comments
Welcome to Open Access Week 2009
After the resounding success of our first ever Open Access Day in 2008, where we had 120 participating organizations from almost 30 countries, we are pleased to announce that this year’s events will be scheduled during the week of 19-23 October 2009 - read the Press Release.
Why a week rather than a day? When we asked for feedback from the folks taking part last year, they said that while they had enjoyed the “event-in-a-box” approach, many of them found that cramming everything into one day was tricky (especially given international time differences) and that spreading activities over a week to suit their individual needs would be easier.
Why participate for the first time or get involved again? We can’t sum it up better than by quoting a librarian who worked with us previously who is joining forces with us again in 2009:
“I’m participating in Open Access Week again this year because I want to shed light on the tremendous potential of Open Access,” said Allyson Mower, Scholarly Communications & Copyright Librarian for the University of Utah’s Marriott Library. “People searching for information usually consume whatever is readily available. Open Access ensures that quality information is at people’s fingertips.”
The organizing forces behind Open Access week remain unchanged from last year namely: PLoS, SPARC and Students for FreeCulture but we have also been joined this year by new key contributors for 2009: OASIS (the Open Access Scholarly Information Sourcebook); Open Access Directory (OAD); and eIFL.net (Electronic Information for Libraries), which will again spearhead events in developing and transitional countries. In addition, we welcome new partners to help us “spread the word” globally (including the developing world) about Open Access Week: SPARC Europe, SPARC Japan, DOAJ and BIREME. To join them please email: dokubo@plos.org.
This year, the organizers will highlight a growing suite of educational resources that local hosts can use to design their own programs on Open Access, for their respective audiences and time zones. The OASIS project features the resources for researchers, administrators, librarians, students, and the public — as well as different OA awareness levels — that will be the centerpiece of the 2009 Open Access Week program.
These audience-specific resource lists will be supplemented by the growing clearinghouse of educational materials available through the Open Access Directory, which will again serve as the key index for participating campuses and organizations on five continents. Through the collaborative functionality of the two initiatives, videos, briefing papers, podcasts, slideshows, posters and other educational tools will be drawn from all over the Web to be featured during Open Access Week 2009.
The organizers will also work with registered participants to develop a variety of sample program tracks, such as “Administrators’ introduction to campus open-access policies and funds,” “OA 101,” and “Complying with the NIH public access policy” that take full advantage of available tools. Scholars, students, libraries, publishers, individuals, and campuses everywhere are invited to adapt these resources as needed and to mark Open Access Week by hosting an event, distributing literature, blogging, or wearing an Open Access t-shirt.
If you like what you see here and want to get involved or find out more, simply complete our contact form.
February 6, 2009 No Comments




