Funder policies
Types of policies
UKRI Open Access Policy – Journal Articles
The UKRI open access policy applies to publications funded by the UK Research Councils (AHRC, BBSRC, EPSRC, ESRC, MRC, NERC, STFC), Innovate UK, and Research England.
The UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) research councils Open Access Policy applies to In-scope research articles submitted for publication on or after 1st April 2022.
In-scope research articles are defined as:
“Peer-reviewed research articles, including reviews and conference papers, that are accepted for final publication in either a journal, conference proceeding with an International Standards Serial Number (ISSN), or publishing platform.”
Funded by one or more of the following research councils:
- Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)
- Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
- Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
- Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
- Innovate UK
- Medical Research Council (MRC)
- Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
- Research England
- Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC).
All articles must:
- be open access by the publication (that is immediately upon publication, with no embargo periods allowed).
- be published with a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) licence, or a Creative Commons Non-Derivatives (CC BY ND) licence if special permission is granted.
- Contain an acknowledgement of funding statement
- contain a data availability statement (even where there are no data associated with the article).
Universities that have a high volume of UKRI funding receive block-grants to enable them to pay for APCs that result from their funding. UON does not currently meet that threshold and therefore does not receive a block grant to cover UKRI funded research outputs. If you are working on a joint publication it is advised that the corresponding author should be from an institute that is in receipt of a UKRI block grant (UKRI will not refund UON for the cost of any APC) funding for payment of APC’s must meet UON’s requirements.
To comply with UKRI’s policy:
- Route 1: Publish in a fully open access journal or publishing platform which makes the publishers version immediately open access upon publication, (this includes journals that UON has read and publish deals with (Springer, Taylor and Francis, Wiley, Sage).
- Route 2: Publish in a subscription journal and deposit the Author’s Accepted Manuscript in out institutional repository (Pure) on immediately on acceptance, updating the record as soon as it is published.
- This version must be made immediately open access upon publication. A publisher requested delay or ‘embargo period’ is not permitted.
- For the article to be published under Route 2, submissions must include the following text after the funding acknowledgement section of the manuscript and any cover letter accompanying the submission:
‘For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising’.
MRC & BBSRC funded articles:
For either open access route, biomedical research articles that acknowledge MRC or BBSRC funding are required to be archived in Europe PubMed Central, in accordance with MRC’s Additional Terms and Conditions and BBSRC’s Safeguarding Good Research Policy.
UKRI Open Access Policy – Longform Publications
Applies to books, chapters and edited works which acknowledge UKRI funding.
If a UKRI funded researcher signs a contract with a publisher on or after 1 January 2024, any long-form publication must be made open access within 12 months of publication under a Creative Commons licence.
UKRI aim to support a variety of open access publishing models that result in immediate open access with a Creative Commons licence. To manage the fund, they have set maximum levels of funding that UKRI will contribute towards the cost of publishing open access. The maximum limits are as follow:
- £10,000 (including VAT) for entire monographs and edited collections
- £1,000 (including VAT) for book chapters
- £6,000 for non-book processing charge models where one eligible UKRI output is published (note these models are also referred to as diamond models, collective models, or subscribe to open models)
An additional £3,000 is also available where two or more UKRI publications from the same institution are published under the same model.
VAT is not charged in the UK for these models, but where VAT is chargeable, this is included in the maximum funding level.
The limits do not apply to the type of publisher, they apply to the type of open access model that is being used.
Supporting third-party material costs
UKRI allows authors to request costs for third party materials in research grant applications and this is the usual way that UKRI funding supports this activity. However, it will be permitted to claim up to £2,000 via the fund, but within the above maximum limits.
Seven year threshold
There will be a seven year threshold for publications to be eligible for support from UKRI’s fund. This means that if a monograph, book chapter, or edited collection is published seven or more years after the formal end of a UKRI funded project, then it will no longer be eligible for support via UKRI’s fund, and therefore they do not expect the publication to be open access. There will be flexibility to accommodate extenuating circumstances.
Copyright and licensing guides for researchers
Jisc have developed a guide on copyright and creative commons licences: Publishing under the UKRI open access policy: copyright and Creative Commons licences – Jisc.
UKRI have also published a complementary guide on managing third party materials in open access publications: Guidance on managing copyright under UKRI open access policy – UKRI.
Wellcome Trust
The Wellcome Trust open access policy for journal articles applies to all articles that are wholly or partially funded by the Wellcome Trust.
All research articles should be published with a CC BY (Creative Commons Attribution) Licence unless an exception for a CC BY ND (Creative Commons Attribution NoDerivatives) licence has been approved.
Ensuring Compliance in 3 paths
Path 1 and 2
Publish in a:
- fully Open Access (OA) journal
- subscription journal covered by a transformative agreement with UON
Transformative Agreements are currently in place with UON and:
- Elsevier
- Sage
- Springer
- Taylor & Francis
- Wiley
How to identify compliant journals
- Fully open access journals and platforms: Search the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ). An Article Processing Charge (APC) is payable – approval required from Head of REF & Research Support.
- Subscription journals in UONs transformative agreements: Publish open access in a subscription journal which is operating under an approved transformative agreement or is designated as a transformative journal.
- Transformative journals: Use the Plan S Journal Checker Tool to find out if the journal is a compliant transformative journal. An article processing charge (APC) is payable.
UON does not receive a block grant for funding open access from Wellcome Trust and must pay for the APC first, before being refunded – please email research@northampton.ac.uk prior to submitting any output for publication that has been funded by the Wellcome Trust.
When publishing gold open access, you must include the submission statement in the acknowledgment section of your manuscript detailed below in Path 3.
Path 3
Publish in a:
- subscription journal and make the Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) freely available in PubMed Central and Europe PMC at the time of publication (Note: Upload to PURE is also required)
- Submitted manuscripts must include the following text in the funding acknowledgement section of the manuscript: ‘This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust [Grant number xxxxx]. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.’
Identifying compliant journals
Before submitting your article you can check which publishers will allow immediate open access of the accepted manuscript in repositories with a CC BY licence by:
- Publisher websites: You can find permissions for the use of accepted manuscripts in repositories in publishers’ ‘self-archiving’ or ‘green open access’ pages
- Sherpa Romeo open access policy search tool: Search for the journal title, then select ‘Accepted Manuscript’ in the publisher policy section
If in doubt – email Research@Northampton.ac.uk for further clarification.
Wellcome Trust have advised that if the publisher does not allow this, then you must choose a different publisher to publish with. It may be worth contacting the publisher directly to seek permission for your article, as it is a condition of your funding. Some publishers will grant permission on request.
If the publisher accepts your submitted manuscript with the retention rights statement, but then requests that you sign a contract or copyright transfer agreement with different terms and conditions follow these steps:
- Request an article processing charge waiver if they offer a paid for open access fee (Wellcome Trust will not pay this charge)
- If the waiver is declined, request an amendment to the publishing agreement (use the template provided by Wellcome)
- If the first two steps are rejected email Wellcome
Deposit to Europe PubMed Central
All articles must be made available open access in Europe PMC (PMC) by the official date of publication to comply with the policy, most publishers will do this on your behalf, check with the publisher prior to publishing.
Licensing requirements
All research articles should be published with a CC BY (Creative Commons Attribution) licence, unless a licensing exception has been approved.
On submission
All Wellcome funded research articles must include the following statement in all submitted research articles to ensure the accepted manuscript can be made freely available in Europe PubMed Central and CRO:
‘This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust [Grant number xxxxx]. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.’
Licensing exception
In extenuating circumstances you can request permission to use a CC-BY-ND (Creative Commons Attribution Non-Derivatives) Licence. To do so:
- Complete the CC BY-ND exception form
- Ensure your request has been approved before submitting your article
- If approved, you must add the following statement to your submitted manuscript: ‘This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust [Grant number xxxxx]. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY-ND public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.’
Licence for Author Accepted Manuscripts (AAM)
All accepted manuscripts must be granted a CC BY (Creative Commons Attribution) licence.
Acknowledgement of funding
You must include acknowledgement of funding in any research article funded by Wellcome Trust. It must:
- be included in the funding or any other relevant section
- contain the name(s) of your funder(s) in full
- contain all grant reference numbers in square brackets.
This applies even if you are not the corresponding author.
Data access statement
All Wellcome funded research articles should include a statement explaining how other researchers can access any data, original software or materials underpinning the research.
Further information can be found on the following Wellcome webpages:
Horizon 2020
All Horizon 2020 peer-reviewed articles are covered by Open Access requirements.
Monographs, books, conference proceedings and reports are not mandated, but Open Access is encouraged.
The policy requires that either the published article or accepted manuscript be deposited in a repository no later than publication. Maximum embargoes are six months for sciences and 12 months for arts, humanities and social sciences. Data sharing is encouraged but there is no obligation, except for projects covered by the Open Data Research Pilot.
Repository records must include the following metadata:
- the terms [‘European Union (EU)’ and ‘Horizon 2020’][‘Euratom’ and ‘Euratom research and training programme 2014-2018’];
- the name of the action, acronym and grant number;
When uploading outputs to Pure, please include this information in the Funding field and Funding Details.
Open Access costs are eligible expenses that can be claimed from your research grant and should be budgeted for in grant applications. The current average APC is approximately £1,750 + VAT.