In January 2020, the University of California (UC) entered into a transformative open access agreement with ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, alongside several other partner institutions (Carnegie Mellon University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Iowa State University). The agreement, which runs from January 1, 2020 through December 31, 2025, covers open access publication in ACM’s journals, proceedings and magazines for all UC corresponding authors (as well as authors from any of the other participating institutions), along with subscription access. 

Through participation in this transformative agreement, the four universities are transitioning their annual library subscription fees for ACM to open access publishing fees. In doing so, they have expanded the universe of readers and the scholarly impact of their authors by making their ACM-published articles open immediately upon publication.

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Agreement Basics

What are the basic terms of the agreement?

How does the agreement work?

Why did UC enter into this agreement?

Why do we think this model will sustainably promote open access?

Impact for Authors

Am I affected by this agreement?

Who is considered a corresponding author?

Why is this different from other agreements, where I am asked to use grant money?

Why should I be concerned with publishing open access when I can already publish open access for free under UC’s open access policies?

What types of publications are covered by this agreement?

Which ACM journals and conferences are included in this agreement?

What if I don't want to publish open access? Can I still publish with ACM?

Article Payment Process

How will the ACM journal or conference notify me of what I’m supposed to do, and what steps do I need to take?

Which license should I choose under this Program?

Resources

What if I have questions or need help?

Last updated October 11, 2024.
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