<div dir="ltr"><b><font color="#ff0000">The UK’s system for assessing research and allocating money has added new open-access requirements.</font></b> Neil Jacobs looks at what this means for researchers in the UK and elsewhere<br>
<br>The four UK higher education funding bodies use the Research Excellence Framework to assess the quality of research in UK universities. The system is also used to allocate funding so universities in the UK – and their researchers – need to pay close attention to any changes made to the framework.<br>
<br><b><font color="#ff0000">One of the requirements for submission to the next framework is that journal articles (and many conference papers) will need to be deposited into a repository at the point of acceptance and made open access within defined embargo periods</font></b>. However, these requirements are about more than compliance with a funder’s open-access policy. They are about the roles, rights and responsibilities of researchers, institutions and publishers in the digital age, and the opportunities to which they give rise.<div>
<br><a href="http://www.researchinformation.info/news/news_story.php?news_id=1659">http://www.researchinformation.info/news/news_story.php?news_id=1659</a></div></div>