Metadata
Title
The Sheridan Libraries
Category
general
UUID
3e0fe4f7681d42348e869c1a71d9665e
Source URL
https://guides.library.jhu.edu/open-access
Parent URL
https://www.library.jhu.edu/library-services/scholarly-communication/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T05:22:05+00:00
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The Sheridan Libraries

Source: https://guides.library.jhu.edu/open-access Parent: https://www.library.jhu.edu/library-services/scholarly-communication/

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Open Access

Information about Open Access to articles and other scholarly texts.

Hopkins Libraries Commitment to Open Scholarship

The Johns Hopkins Libraries affirm a vision of open scholarship that advances research, teaching, and intellectual growth, and furthers the University's mission of knowledge for the world. Open scholarship benefits everyone because it facilitates faster dissemination and access to knowledge by broader audiences. Open scholarship removes barriers to interdisciplinary and international scholarship, facilitates discovery and collaboration across fields, and ensures that scholarship remains accessible through time. For these reasons the JHU Libraries are committed to supporting the immense possibilities of open scholarship.

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Subjects: Education, Psychology

Open Access Advocacy

OA Basics

Open Access refers to the practice of making scholarly research publications freely available for reading and re-use. Opening your work can boost readership, increase impact and citations, ensure you get credit for your ideas, and can increase rapid dissemination of and feedback on your research.

If you have questions about scholarly communications, publishing, open access, or how the library can support your scholarly work, please email scholcomm@jh.edu.

If you have questions about copyright, intellectual property, or your rights as a content creator, please visit our Copyright Guide or email copyright@jhu.edu.

Types of Open Access

Use this quick tutorial to determine what type of OA you should choose:

Finding Reliable Open Access Journals and Books

Since identifying a predatory journal is a process and involves a lot of subjective considerations, there isn't one list of bad actors. You should use one or more of the sites below to help you identify predatory journals. Most of these are 'white lists', or lists of journals that meet certain requirements to prove they are reputable. Some are lists of characteristics for you to look for when considering a journal.

Funder OA Requirements

Many funding insititutions now require recipients to make journal articles freely available to the public. Making journal articles freely available will allow:

The links below provide lists of funding agencies with such mandates.

Johns Hopkins Open Access Policy

https://provost.jhu.edu/about/open-access/