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Public/Open Access

Public access, a requirement that certain federally funded research results (i.e., peer-reviewed publications and data) be made freely available after a given embargo period, is intended to accelerate scientific discovery and improve education. In 2013, the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) issued a memorandum directing federal agencies with over $100 million in annual R&D expenditures to develop and implement public access plans.

AAU works with its member institutions and other associations to monitor federal public access policies and evaluate issues relating to opportunities and challenges for universities as they move to comply with and implement these new federal requirements. AAU also engages in discussions of policy and best practices relating to open access, which refers to the growing practice of making scholarly works available digitally, online, free of charge, and without most copyright and licensing restrictions. As part of this work, AAU is partnering with the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) and the Association of University Presses (AUPreses) on the TOME (Toward an Open Monograph Ecosystem) initiative to accelerate dissemination of scholarship in the humanities and humanistic social sciences through open access editions of peer-reviewed and professionally edited monographs.”

AAU and APLU write to Representatives Sensenbrenner and Johnson to express their strong support for the goals of H.R. 1426, the Public Access to Public Science (PAPS) Act, which would make articles resulting from federally funded scientific research freely available online.
AAU and APLU write to congratulate Senators John Cornyn and Ron Wyden on the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee’s unanimous approval yesterday of S. 779, the Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act of 2015 (FASTR). 
AAU and APLU write to Representatives Doyle, Lofgren, and Yoder to express their strong support for the goals of H.R. 1477, the Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act of 2015 (FASTR).
AAU and APLU write to Chairman Smith and Ranking Member Johnson on behalf of their member universities specifically concerning Section 302, Public Access to Research Articles and Data, of the “Frontiers in Innovation, Research, Science and Technologies (FIRST) Act” discussion draft.
Comments on OSTP Memorandum, “Increasing Access to the Results of Federally Funded Scientific Research,” May 14, 2013. 
Dr. David E. Shulenburger, comments on the White House Public Access Policy.
AAU and NASULGC write to express their strong support for NIH’s PubMed Central and our consequent opposition to H.R. 801, the Fair Copyright in Research Works Act. 
The statement is a call to action for universities to ensure the broadest possible access to the products of their work.
AAU letter to Chairman Conyers reaffirms AAU’s strong support of NIH’s efforts to expand public access to the results of NIH-funded research through the implementation of PubMed Central.