News Release

Read & Publish agreement confirmed between The Company of Biologists and EIFL

Fee-free Open Access publishing in leading biological science journals now available to researchers in developing and transition economy countries.

Business Announcement

The Company of Biologists

From Albania to Zimbabwe, researchers in 30 developing and transition economy countries can benefit from immediate and fee-free Open Access publishing in The Company of Biologists' subscription journals following a Read & Publish agreement with Electronic Information for Libraries (EIFL).

This landmark agreement runs until 31 December 2023 and institutional members of EIFL-partner library consortia in eligible countries can participate free of charge.

Researchers in eligible counties will be able to publish an uncapped number of Open Access research articles in Development, Journal of Cell Science and Journal of Experimental Biology without paying an article processing charge (APC). They will also benefit from free and unlimited access to the journals and their archives dating back to 1853.

"This agreement is an important step towards making the transition to Open Access more equitable," said Romy Beard, EIFL Licensing Programme Manager. "We are pleased to partner with The Company of Biologists to allow free Open Access publishing in their three hybrid journals. We are also pleased that The Company of Biologists is able to provide automatic recognition of authors, eliminating the need for authors to actively claim an APC waiver."

"The Company of Biologists has been committed to Open Access for over 15 years and we were one of the first not-for-profit publishers to launch a cost-neutral Read & Publish initiative. We are delighted that over 200 institutions in 17 countries are already participating, but it is also very important to us that the benefits of Read & Publish agreements are available to researchers in developing and transition economy countries," says Claire Moulton, Publisher at The Company of Biologists.

"As a result, we are very excited about our agreement with EIFL. By removing the financial barriers to accessing content and publishing articles immediately Open Access, it offers the opportunity to further democratise science."

"Our mission is to advance excellence in the biological and biomedical sciences worldwide and we believe that immediate and free availability of high-quality research helps us to achieve this," says Richard Grove, Commercial Manager at The Company of Biologists. "We look forward to working closely with EIFL and EIFL-partner library consortia to build awareness of this new agreement and to encourage Open Access article submissions from corresponding authors in 30 developing and transition economy countries."

Further information about our agreement with EIFL is available here.

A list of eligible countries is available here.

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About EIFL

EIFL (Electronic Information for Libraries) is a not-for-profit organization that works with libraries to enable access to knowledge in developing and transition economy countries in Africa, Asia Pacific, Europe and Latin America.

EIFL runs a number of programmes to enable access to knowledge for education, learning, research and sustainable community development. This includes negotiating agreements with publishers to secure affordable access to e-resources as well as Open Access publishing terms on behalf of libraries and authors in EIFL partner countries.

About The Company of Biologists

The Company of Biologists is a not-for-profit publishing organisation dedicated to supporting and inspiring the biological community. We partner with libraries and library consortia to enable biologists worldwide to access our leading peer-reviewed subscription journals: Development, Journal of Cell Science and Journal of Experimental Biology. We also publish two fully OA journals - Disease Models & Mechanisms and Biology Open.

We have been committed to Open Access (OA) for over 16 years. Our cost-neutral Read & Publish OA initiative is the latest step in our OA journey and over 200 institutions in 17 countries, five library consortia and one international library organisation are now participating.


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