Preface
The Internet has fundamentally changed the practical and
economic realities of distributing scientific knowledge and
cultural heritage. For the first time ever, the Internet now
offers the chance to constitute a global and interactive
representation of human knowledge, including cultural heritage
and the guarantee of worldwide access.
We, the undersigned, feel obliged to address the challenges
of the Internet as an emerging functional medium for
distributing knowledge. Obviously, these developments will be
able to significantly modify the nature of scientific
publishing as well as the existing system of quality
assurance.
In accordance with the spirit of the Declaration of the
Budapest Open Acess Initiative, the ECHO Charter and the
Bethesda Statement on Open Access Publishing, we have drafted
the Berlin Declaration to promote the Internet as a functional
instrument for a global scientific knowledge base and human
reflection and to specify measures which research policy
makers, research institutions, funding agencies, libraries,
archives and museums need to consider.
Goals
Our mission of disseminating knowledge is only half
complete if the information is not made widely and readily
available to society. New possibilities of knowledge
dissemination not only through the classical form but also and
increasingly through the open access paradigm via the Internet
have to be supported. We define open access as a comprehensive
source of human knowledge and cultural heritage that has been
approved by the scientific community.
In order to realize the vision of a global and accessible
representation of knowledge, the future Web has to be
sustainable, interactive, and transparent. Content and
software tools must be openly accessible and
compatible.
Definition of an Open Access Contribution
Establishing open access as a worthwhile procedure ideally
requires the active commitment of each and every individual
producer of scientific knowledge and holder of cultural
heritage. Open access contributions include original
scientific research results, raw data and metadata, source
materials, digital representations of pictorial and graphical
materials and scholarly multimedia material.
Open access contributions must satisfy two conditions:
- The author(s) and right holder(s) of such contributions
grant(s) to all users a free, irrevocable, worldwide, right
of access to, and a license to copy, use, distribute,
transmit and display the work publicly and to make and
distribute derivative works, in any digital medium for any
responsible purpose, subject to proper attribution of
authorship (community standards, will continue to provide
the mechanism for enforcement of proper attribution and
responsible use of the published work, as they do now), as
well as the right to make small numbers of printed copies
for their personal use.
- A complete version of the work and all supplemental
materials, including a copy of the permission as stated
above, in an appropriate standard electronic format is
deposited (and thus published) in at least one online
repository using suitable technical standards (such as the
Open Archive definitions) that is supported and maintained
by an academic institution, scholarly society, government
agency, or other well-established organization that seeks to
enable open access, unrestricted distribution, inter
operability, and long-term archiving.
Supporting the Transition to the Electronic Open Access
Paradigm
Our organizations are interested in the further promotion
of the new open access paradigm to gain the most benefit for
science and society. Therefore, we intend to make progress
by
- encouraging our researchers/grant recipients to publish
their work according to the principles of the open access
paradigm.
- encouraging the holders of cultural heritage to support
open access by providing their resources on the
Internet.
- developing means and ways to evaluate open access
contributions and online-journals in order to maintain the
standards of quality assurance and good scientific
practice.
- advocating that open access publication be recognized in
promotion and tenure evaluation.
- advocating the intrinsic merit of contributions to an
open access infrastructure by software tool development,
content provision, metadata creation, or the publication of
individual articles.
We realize that the process of moving to open access
changes the dissemination of knowledge with respect to legal
and financial aspects. Our organizations aim to find solutions
that support further development of the existing legal and
financial frameworks in order to facilitate optimal use and
access.
Governments, universities, research institutions, funding
agencies, foundations, libraries, museums, archives, learned
societies and professional associations who share the vision
expressed in the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to
Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities are therefore invited
to join the signatories that have already signed the
Declaration.
Please contact: |
Prof. Dr. Peter Gruss President of
the Max Planck Society Hofgartenstraße 8 D-80539
Munich Germany e-mail: praesident@gv.mpg.de |
|
|
|
last changed:
23.05.2005 | |