Arnaud ensures data consistency and the application of the FAIR principles throughout OPERAS. With a dual background in linguistics and digital resources management, he started working in university ibraries and was a digital curator for a CNRS Open Archive. He joined OPERAS in 2016 as a Technical Coordinator for the related HIRMEOS project and is based at OpenEdition in Marseille, France. He is currently WP coordinator in CRAFT-OA, scientific coordinator in Skills4EOSC and task member in OPERAS-PLUS.
Increasing Diamond Open Access Journals quality, visibility, and recognition through the Diamond Discovery Hub
Arnaud Gingold, Sona Lisa Arasteh-Roodsary & Hanna Varachkina
With this prospect in mind, the CRAFT-OA Horizon Europe project has been set up to support the quality improvement, build technical expertise, and enhance the visibility and discoverability of Open Access Diamond Journals (OADJs). A major contribution to this is the Diamond Discovery Hub (DDH), that CRAFT-OA is currently developing. The DDH is intended to be a strategic and game-changing service to increase the visibility of OADJs and, therefore, to give policy makers the appropriate tool to recognise the value of OADJs in their RA processes.
The DDH is a key element on the path from visibility, to discoverability, and, finally, to the recognition of OADJs. While the CRAFT-OA project will support the OADJs’ quality through training and documentation and through the enhancement of some major publishing tools, the DDH will ensure that this global improvement has a concrete ecosystemic impact. The DDH will collect and validate high-quality metadata, with a special focus on diamond metadata that is based on refined criteria and is verified manually. This set of richer and more consistent information about OADJs will thus constitute an authoritative list of OADJs and provide complete and reliable information to human users, and interoperable metadata to any indexer or aggregator.
However, the DDH is not designed only as a technical tool, but rather as a community service that can both preserve and promote equity and diversity. Its design takes into account the diverse landscape of Diamond OA publishing and the potential challenge for single publishers to reach such a quality level. It will be implemented as a responsive and WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) compliant website with a SEO (Search Engine Optimization) friendly User Interface (UI) and will be scalable as well as easy to maintain and extend in the future. Furthermore, at the centre of the DDH operations will stand an “Editorial team”, initially composed of partners of the CRAFT-OA project. The Editorial team’s mission will be to communicate about the DDH requirements as well as to facilitate their adoption. The Editorial team will be able to support single publishers in case they want to join the DDH directly, but it will primarily target trusted sources. A trusted source is a source of journal metadata that provides verified metadata about the Diamond OA criteria for journals. In the context of the DDH, the concept of trust relies on the verification of metadata by humans that check the metadata according to the Diamond OA criteria for journals developed by CRAFT-OA and DIAMAS. Concretely, the CRAFT-OA trusted sources will be either indexing or publishing services that will verify their journals’ compliance with the diamond criteria. This distribution of work between the DDH team and the Diamond community will ensure, first, optimal coverage of the OADJs and, second, secure both the consistency and flexibility necessary to offer a common framework and adapt to specific cases.
The DDH, alongside the other outputs of the CRAFT-OA project, therefore are a powerful tool to strengthen the Diamond OA community as such, to critically facilitate OADJs recognition, and, finally, to contribute to the reform of RA.
The CRAFT-OA project (Creating a Robust Accessible Federated Technology for Open Access) is an OPERAS project funded for three years under the Horizon Europe Framework Programme and is coordinated by the University of Göttingen.
KEYWORDS
academic publishing; diamond open access; open access; research assessment
References
- Armengou, C., Bargheer, M., Barnes, L., Frantsvåg, J. E., Manista, G., & Tsoukala, V. (2024, mars 7). Creating Community-Driven Pathways to Equitable Open Scholarly Publishing with CRAFT-OA, DIAMAS, and PALOMERA – Where Are We Now? WEBINAR Slides. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10793499
- Bargheer, M. (2023, june 15). CRAFT-OA Creating a Robust Accessible Federated Technology for Open Access. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8086068
- Bosman, J., Frantsvåg, J. E., Kramer, B., Langlais, P.-C., & Proudman, V. (2021). OA Diamond Journals Study. Part 1: Findings. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4558704
- Becerril, A., Bosman, J., Bjørnshauge, L., Frantsvåg, J. E., Kramer, B., Langlais, P.-C., Mounier, P., Proudman, V., Redhead, C., & Torny, D. (2021). OA Diamond Journals Study. Part 2: Recommendations. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4562790