Journal of the Faculty of Theology of Kafkas University. Adopting the principle that making scientific research free to the public will increase the global sharing of knowledge, it provides instant open access to its content.
https://dergipark.org.tr/kafkasilahiyat/archive
Kafkas University Journal of Theology Faculty, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0)
Kafkas University Journal of Theology Faculty/ Journal of Social Sciences - Journal of Social Sciences signed the Budapest Open Access Declaration.
See: http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/list_signatures?indorg=all&keyword=kafkas
Budapest Open Access Initiative (http://www.budapestopenaccessinitiative.org/)
An old tradition and a new technology have combined to enable unprecedented public good. The old tradition is that scientists publish their work outputs in academic journals free of charge, at their own request, in order to share research results and knowledge. The new technology is the Internet. The public interest includes the worldwide electronic distribution of peer-reviewed journal literature; It enables completely unrestricted and free access to this literature for scientists, researchers, teachers, students and enthusiasts. removing barriers to access to scientific literature; It paves the way for the acceleration of research, the development of education, the rich and the poor - the poor and the rich to share information, to make this literature as useful as possible, and to unite humanity in a common intellectual view and information-seeking environment.
This kind of free and free online use, which we call open access, is restricted to a small fraction of journal literature for various reasons. Despite this limited collection, many different initiatives have demonstrated that open access is economically viable. Open access gives readers the extra power to find and leverage literature resources; It provides broad and measurable new environments of visibility for authors and their work, increasing readership and influence. We call on all interested institutions and individuals to help secure these gains for all, make the rest of the literature accessible, and remove the barriers ahead, especially the price barrier. As the number of supporters of this initiative grows, the benefits of open access will begin to be seen together and more quickly.
The literature that scientists present to the world without expectation of pay should be freely available online. This category primarily covers peer-reviewed journal articles; however, preprints of unpeered studies published by the authors to receive comments or to share important research results with their colleagues are also included in this category. There are many degrees and types of wider and easier access to scientific literature. In this declaration, open access means that “scientific literature can be accessed, read, recorded, copied, printed, scanned, linked to the full text, indexed, transferred to software and used for any legal purpose without financial, legal and technical barriers through the Internet”. used meaning. Restriction on reproduction-distribution and the role of copyright in this field; should be given to authors to check the integrity of their own work so that they can be properly recognized and cited.
Although peer-reviewed journal literature is freely available to readers online, open access journal publishing is not without cost. However, experience shows that the overall costs in open access are much lower than in traditional forms of distribution. Open access provides an opportunity to save money while expanding the scope of information dissemination. However, there is also a strong incentive for professional associations, universities, libraries, foundations and other institutions to embrace open access to improve their services. Realizing open access will require new cost-sharing models and financing mechanisms, but significantly reducing the total cost of distribution is an indication that the goal is an attainable outcome, not just preferable or utopian.
We recommend using two complementary strategies to ensure open access to scholarly journal literature:
I. Personal Archiving: First, scientists need help and tools when placing their peer-reviewed journal articles in open electronic archives, called personal archiving. When these archives comply with the standards established by the Open Access Initiative, search engines and other tools can treat individual archives as a single archive. Thus, users do not need to know which archives exist and where they are located in order to find archives and benefit from their contents.
II. Open Access Journals: Second, scientists need a tool/method to start publishing the next generation of journals that support open access and contribute to journals that choose to switch to open access. Since journal articles should reach the widest possible audience, copyrights will not be invoked to limit access to and use of material published in these new journals. In the next process, copyrights and other tools will be used to ensure the permanence of all published articles in open access, rather than blocking them. Because price is a barrier to access, these new journals do not charge subscription or access fees and turn to other methods to cover costs. For this purpose; Foundations and governments that fund research, universities and laboratories that employ researchers, donations made by science or institution to support research, open access supporters, proceeds from the sale of basic text plugins, funds that will be released by the closure or cancellation of traditional subscription or access fee journals and even the self-involvement of researchers, there are many alternative sources of funding. Not all disciplines or nations have to accept any of these solutions, and the search for different and creative alternatives should not be discouraged.
The goal is to have the peer-reviewed journal literature open access. (I) Personal archiving and new generation (II) open access journals are methods of achieving this goal. These are not only directly targeted tools, but also bring academics directly to each other without waiting for changes brought about by the market or legislation. In addition to supporting the two strategies outlined, we also encourage experimenting with more ways to move from existing distribution methods to open access. Flexibility, experimentation and adaptation in local conditions are the best ways to ensure rapid, safe and long-lasting progress in different environments.
March 22, 2002
Budapest, Hungary