Open Access (OA) advocates will tell you that there are two roads to OA.
Green OA consists of researchers continuing to publish in traditional subscription journals, and then self-archiving their final peer-reviewed papers on the Web, either in an institutional repository or in a central or subject-based repository like arXiv or PubMed Central.
This is not an issue of intellectual curiosity alone: it has important strategic implications for the OA movement. It requires, for instance, that the movement decides whether to treat Green and Gold OA as complementary or competitive activities; and if they are competitive, then where the OA movement should focus its main efforts ...
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UPDATE (17/03/09).
Peter Suber comments on this article here.
Ivy Anderson, Director, Collections, California Digital Library comments here.
Former Commercial Director of publisher Wiley-Blackwell Steven Hall comments here
Stevan Harnad responds to Ivy Anderson's comments here.
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