Open Access for REF

The next REF exercise will largely build on the 2021 REF, which evidenced a high degree of open access compliance across UK institutions. There will be an open access mandate for journal articles and conference proceedings just as there was for the 2021 cycle, however, no additional requirement has been stipulated for long form outputs such as monographs or book chapters. Outputs in scope are those published between 01 January 2021 and 31 December 2028, though some of the updated requirements will only be mandatory from 01 January 2026.

REF2029 requirements & information

  • The basics

    Most outputs will be able to comply with the REF Open Access requirements as follows: 

    • Check if your journal permits self-archiving of papers, and whether the embargo date is a maximum of 6 months (for REF panels A&B) or 12 months (for REF panels C&D) 

    • Deposit the accepted version of your article or conference paper from Elements to SRO at the point of acceptance or within3 months of publication. 

  • How is Open Access defined in this policy?

    The REF policy states that to be considered OA,  the output must allow anyone with internet access to search electronically within the text, read it and download it without charge, and must be discoverable to anyone with an internet connection, and to search engines.

  • What outputs does this cover?

    Outputs in scope are those published between 01 January 2021 and 31 December 2028. The policy applies to journal articles and published conference proceedings where the conference publishes 'online, journal-like series of proceedings (typically within the sciences)'. These usually have an ISSN. Conferences that publish books or book-like outputs (typically in the humanities) are not intended to be in scope of the policy, however, we would encourage deposit of accepted manuscripts for these items as well.

  • How can an output comply?

    To comply, the final peer-reviewed manuscript of all articles and conference proceedings must be deposited in an open access institutional or subject repository within 3 months of publication, though depositing manuscripts after acceptance is also encouraged. Authors should deposit their author accepted manuscript (AAM) which is the version post peer review but before any copyediting or layout work has taken place.

  • What are the permitted embargo periods?

    Most publishers will allow the deposit of the AAM in repositories such as ßÏßÏÊÓƵ Research Online, but many will not allow the paper to be made freely available immediately and will impose an embargo period. The policy states that outputs must be deposited in a repository within 3 months of publication, but that they can be locked and made freely available to read after an embargo period of no more than 6 months (for REF panels A&B) and 12 months (for REF panels C&D).  

    The ßÏßÏÊÓƵ’s Publications and Copyright Policy allows authors will retain the right to make a copy of their Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM), for journal articles and conference proceedings, immediately Open Access through their institutional repository under a CC BY license, irrespective of embargo periods stipulated by publishers. You can read more on our webpages here. 

  • Do I need to deposit in a repository if the article was published as Gold OA

    At ßÏßÏÊÓƵ we ask that you deposit your article in SRO via Elements even if it was published as Gold OA.

  • Is there any specific licence requirement?

    The policy does not ask for a specific licence as long as the reader is able to read the output, to download it, and to search electronically within it, all without charge. Outputs licenced under (or more permissive) would meet these requirements.

  • What if the output doesn't comply?

    In certain circumstances a paper can be submitted to the REF even though it does not comply with the REF Open Access Policy. Permitted exceptions are outlined on the Exceptions for the REF page alongside the action that authors need to take. It is always better to seek advice as early as possible in the process.

  • Exceptions for the REF 2029 Open Access policy

    In certain circumstances a paper can be submitted to the REF even though it does not comply with the REF Open Access Policy. Permitted exceptions are outlined below alongside the action that authors need to take. Exceptions are recorded in SRO by the team but in many cases will need to be agreed with UoA leads, DRaKEs or Research Managers. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, even if an exception applies, the accepted manuscript should be added to SRO within 3 months of publication. It is always better to act on acceptance and notification of publication to minimise the risk of an output becoming ineligible for REF submission.

Deposit exceptions

The following exceptions deal with cases where the output is unable to meet the deposit requirements, or has been made open access via another route.

Access exceptions

The following exceptions deal with cases where deposit of the output is possible but there are issues with meeting the access requirements. The accepted manuscript should still be deposited as soon as possible.

Technical exceptions

The following exceptions deal with cases where an output is unable to meet the criteria due to a technical issue.

  • 10. At acceptance, the individual was at a different UK HEI that failed to comply

    New staff should add details of their outputs in the current REF period to SRO or ask School staff to do so in line with their agreed support. If School staff are adding on behalf of a new academic/research colleague who was previously at a different UK HEI, they should alert Library SRO staff to this by noting their date of arrival in the ‘Notes to SRO staff field’ for each output published before their start date at ßÏßÏÊÓƵ and Library staff will apply the exceptions on SRO. We are not required to seek and retain evidence of the previous HEI's compliance with the deposit requirements and so this exception will be used for all items published before the author came to Sussex. If the output was deposited with a repository at a previous institution please also include this in ‘Notes to SRO staff’ and the information that this item was compliant elsewhere can be recorded if freely available

  • 11. A short-term technical failure within the repository prevented compliance

    If there is a short-term technical failure authors should add their output as soon as possible after it has been resolved.

  • 12. An external service provider failure prevented compliance (eg a subject repository ceased to operate)

    Unlikely to be applicable - ßÏßÏÊÓƵ authors should add their work to SRO even if they also add a copy to a subject repository to increase dissemination

Other exceptions

In very exceptional cases, it may not be possible for an output to meet the open access requirements for a reason not covered by the exceptions listed above and it may be appropriate to record an ‘Other’ exception giving an explanation of why the requirements could not be met. Other exceptions will be handled on a case-by-case basis and authors should contact RQI to discuss. Please raise the issue as soon as possible after it arises.

Additional REF 2029 exception for submission

For REF 2029, outputs authored by one or more non-volume contributing staff may be submitted as part of a unit’s REF submission who are or were ineligible to be included in the volume measure for REF 2029.  

Further information

Read the  document and the  or their

Contact the Library Research Support team for support with Open Access questions at openaccess@sussex.ac.uk

Get in touch with the Research Quality and Impact team at rqi@sussex.ac.uk

Get in touch with the Library ßÏßÏÊÓƵ Research Online team at sro@sussex.ac.uk