CAUTION: This e-mail originated outside the University of Southampton.
Hello -

I hope this post is OK to share on GOAL. I think you'll be interested in three 
new open access initiatives from the MIT Press over the last month:


  1.  This open collection of architecture and urban studies books is part of 
the Mellon- and NEH-funded Humanities Open Book Program: 
https://mitpress.mit.edu/blog/mit-press-launches-new-open-access-collection-34-classic-architecture-and-urban-studies-titles

For years, the MIT Press has fielded requests for ebook editions of classic, 
out-of-print works, like the two volumes of The 
Staircase<http://bit.ly/MITPStaircase> by John Templer, On Leon Battista 
Alberti: His Literary and Aesthetic Theories<http://bit.ly/MITPBattista> by 
Mark Jarzombek, Possible Palladian Villas: (Plus a Few Instructively Impossible 
Ones)<http://bit.ly/MITPPalladian> by George L. Hersey and Richard Freedman, 
and Making a Middle Landscape<http://bit.ly/MITPMiddle> by Peter G. Rowe. Many 
of these foundational texts were published before the advent of ebooks and 
remained undigitized because of complex design requirements and the prohibitive 
cost of image permissions.

Now, with funding from the Mellon Foundation and the efforts of an 
open-access-savvy digitization team, the MIT Press was able to not only secure 
image permissions, but also to solicit fresh prefaces that bring new insights 
to bear on many of these classic texts. Many of the titles will also be made 
available on the open access platform PubPub where readers will be able to 
interact with and annotate the works with contemporary context and related 
readings.



  1.  MIT Open Publishing Services - which will offer their professional 
editorial, design, marketing support for open access projects:  
https://mitpress.mit.edu/blog/mit-press-launches-mit-open-publishing-services

MIT Open Publishing Services (MITops), working with its partner the Knowledge 
Futures Group<https://www.knowledgefutures.org/>, provides a portfolio of 
services to mission-aligned partners, including peer review support and 
editorial development; professional copy editing and design; marketing and 
publicity; and hosting on the PubPub<https://www.pubpub.org/> open source 
platform.

  1.  MIT Direct 2 Open - a new OA model that will make monographs available 
going forward: https://mitpress.mit.edu/blog/mit-press-launches-direct-open

A first-of-its-kind sustainable framework for open access monographs, D2O moves 
professional and scholarly books from a solely market-based, purchase model 
where individuals and libraries buy single eBooks, to a collaborative, 
library-supported open access model.

D2O gives institutions the opportunity to harness collective action to support 
access to knowledge. Beginning in 2022, all new MIT Press scholarly monographs 
and edited collections will be openly available on the MIT Press Direct eBook 
platform<https://direct.mit.edu/books>. Instead of purchasing a title once for 
a single collection, libraries now have the opportunity to fund them one time 
for the world through participant fees.
Full disclosure - I am involved in the promotion of the first of these items - 
the book collection. The rest is of interest to me because I follow open access 
publishing closely as a person who worked in university press publishing and 
libraries for 20 years. It was recommended to me that I share the collection on 
GOAL, the rest is just because I think you'll be interested in how MIT Press is 
tackling OA from all sides.


Jessica





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