Open access Journal of Southern Religion adopts Creative Commons Attribution 
license
<http://wp.me/p20y83-q5>
 
Earlier this month, the long-time online open access Journal of Southern 
Religion (ISSN: 1094-5253) began releasing its content under a Creative Commons 
Attribution license. The announcement can be found on the JSR blog here.
 
If JSR was already an open access journal, what is the significance of this 
development?
 
Gratis and libre open access

The JSR announcement gives me an opportunity to distinguish between two general 
concepts of open or "free" access to online academic literature. The 
distinguishing terms usually applied in this discussion are gratis and libre.
 
Gratis is related to the word "grace," often connoting the idea of something 
given as a gift, and meaning a good or service that is provided without price 
or requirement of compensation. From the recipient’s point of view, the good or 
service is provided without charge. It’s free! Gratis open access allows reader 
access to online scholarly content without a subscription or article paywall 
barrier. (Access to a browser-equipped computer with an Internet connection, 
which may not be free, is assumed.) …

Gary F. Daught
Omega Alpha | Open Access
Advocate for open access academic publishing in religion and theology
http://oaopenaccess.wordpress.com
oa.openaccess @ gmail.com | @OAopenaccess



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