Home > Open Access > About

About Open Access

Font size: AAA

Open access publishing removes price and permission barriers to any user with access to the internet. The three major definitions of "open access" are put forth in the Budapest, Bethesda, and Berlin public statements, referred to by Peter Suber, as the Budapest-Bethesda-Berlin or BBB definition of open access.


All of the definitions include these essential points:

  • Open access content is free of charge for all users
  • Content creators/providers give users permission for all legitimate scholarly uses, without financial, legal, or technical barriers beyond those inherent in gaining access to the internet.

Open access journals bring scholars' work to the widest audience possible, without sacrificing timely, rigorous peer and editorial review.

Open access does not mean free; there are substantial, unavoidable costs in internet publishing, even if no print version is produced. Some open access publishers require an article processing fee from the author (such as BioMed Central (BMC), Public Library of Science (PLoS)), and may offer reduced fees for those who cannot pay.


The Oberlin College Libraries strongly encourage Oberlin scholars to consider an open access publisher when preparing a manuscript for review. All Oberlin College authors are eligible for reduced fees with both BMC and PLoS, thanks to the Libraries' consortial memberships in those organizations.

Learn about Open Access at Oberlin.

Last updated:
November 15, 2017