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Rights Retention


Rights Retention Strategy - cOAlition S

The Rights Retention Strategy (RRS) enables authors to exercise the rights they have on their manuscripts to deposit a copy of the Author Accepted Manuscript ( ...

Plan S Rights Retention Strategy

cOAlition S has developed a Rights Retention Strategy to give researchers supported by a cOAlition S Organisation the freedom to submit manuscripts for ...

Explaining the Rights Retention Strategy - The Scholarly Kitchen

the Rights Retention Strategy (RRS) takes an all-encompassing approach. The RRS — like Plan S generally — applies to the author and/or their ...

Rights retention | Open Access Oxford

What is rights retention? Rights retention is an initiative used by increasing numbers of UK universities that supports the self-archiving 'green' route to open ...

What Is Rights Retention? - Library - The University of Melbourne

By including a rights retention statement in the submitted manuscripts of journal articles and conference papers, authors can retain rights to ...

N8 Rights Retention Statement - Frequently Asked Questions

Rights Retention refers to the practice of authors retaining certain rights to their work, such as the right to distribute, share, or reuse their research ...

Rights Retention and Secondary Publishing Rights - EIFL |

Rights retention Secondary Publishing Rights Learn more Resources Frequently Asked Questions Rights retention and secondary publishing ...

Open access and rights retention - LibGuides at Sheffield Hallam ...

The lowdown on Rights Retention ... In practice, this means that you cannot use your own work without explicit written permission from your publisher. ... Rights ...

Rights Retention - Open Access - UEA Library - LibGuides

Rights retention is a way to publish Open Access immediately without having to pay for Article Processing Charges (APCs).

Rights Retention and Repositories - Plan S

The Rights Retention Strategy allows researchers to make their work Open Access for free while publishing in their choice of journal. Once the ...

A practical guide to implementing RRS for researchers - OpenAIRE

The guide called "Implementing the rights retention strategy for scientific publications" is a tool designed for researchers and paves the way for immediate ...

Reviewing the Rights Retention Strategy – A pathway to wider Open ...

The Rights Retention Strategy (RRS) aims to ensure that researchers funded by these organisations retain the rights to their work.

Rights retention - Open Access - Cranfield Library Services

Author rights retention is a means for researchers and universities to regain “academic sovereignty over the publishing process.”

Rights Retention Strategy | Research support - King's College London

King's College London asserts a non-exclusive, irrevocable, worldwide license to deposit the work under a CC BY licence.

Implementing the rights retention strategy for scientific publications

The rights retention strategy is a tool for researchers to retain sufficient rights on their scientific articles so that they can make them available in ...

Rights Retention Helper - SPARC Europe

Rights Retention Helper ... This helper includes key resources on rights retention for institutions and researchers: including examples of rights retention ...

The Rise of Rights Retention: How are we Supporting Researchers?

Rights Retention is a mechanism whereby an author retains sufficient intellectual property rights, in order to comply with their funder or ...

Rights Retention Strategy - STM Association

The Rights Retention Strategy provides a challenge to the vital income that is necessary to fund the resources, time, and effort to provide not only the many ...

Rights Retention | Open Research - University of Exeter

What are the benefits of Rights Retention? Rights Retention allows you to retain rights in your work, rather than signing these over to a publisher. This means ...

The Politics of Rights Retention - MDPI

For Rumsey, rights retention is about control of the scholarly record; it prevents publishers from having a monopoly over the content they publish, which ...