Blog SciELO-México: https://boletinscielomx.blogspot.com/2026/01/jstor-inicia-su-linea-de-libros-en.html
Mensajes previos del Boletín SciELO-México y suscripción: https://groups.google.com/g/boletin-scielo-mexico
*****************************************************************
January 12, 2026
JSTOR, part of the nonprofit ITHAKA, today announced a major milestone for open scholarship: the first 100 books published through Path to Open are now openly available to readers around the world. Originally released in 2023 with early access for Path to Open participating libraries, these titles have officially “flipped” to open access, marking the first cohort to complete the program’s three-year pathway to openness.
Path to Open was launched to address a persistent challenge in scholarly publishing—how to expand global access to peer-reviewed academic books while ensuring long-term sustainability for university presses. Through a cost-sharing model supported by libraries, publishers receive guaranteed funding from JSTOR for new monographs, libraries gain early access to frontlist scholarship, and titles ultimately become free to read for anyone, anywhere increasing the impact of authors’ scholarship. This milestone marks the beginning of the realization of that founding vision.
“Path to Open was built to balance sustainability for publishers, opportunity for authors, and affordability for libraries,” said Kevin Guthrie, President of ITHAKA and Manager Director for JSTOR. “Seeing the first 100 titles become openly available shows that a community-driven model can deliver on all three at scale while expanding global access to high-quality scholarship”
The newly open titles span a wide range of disciplines across the humanities and social sciences and were published by presses of all sizes, underscoring the program’s commitment to bibliodiversity and broad participation across the scholarly publishing ecosystem.
Their release also highlights the important additional impact open access books have through increased discovery and use. Across JSTOR, open access books currently make up about 10% of available titles, yet they account for 45% of all book usage on the platform. JSTOR anticipates usage of the first 100 Path to Open titles will increase by more than 300% after becoming open access, as they become discoverable to readers at thousands of institutions worldwide and beyond the academy.
The program was conceived by and built in collaboration with university press leaders and the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), and continues to be guided by a Path to Open Community Advisory Committee of librarians, publishers, and scholars.
“ACLS’s support for Path to Open reflects our mission to strengthen the creation and circulation of humanistic scholarship,” said Sarah McKee, Project Manager, Amplifying Humanistic Scholarship at ACLS. “This milestone shows how collective action can create a more equitable and durable open access ecosystem for scholarly books.”
The books themselves illustrate what this expanded access means for
scholars, instructors, and students. The first 100 open titles include
research on public health, religion, education, communications,
literature, film studies, and global history, with many addressing
topics, regions, and communities that have limited existing scholarly
coverage. All titles were published by university presses and underwent
rigorous peer review and editorial development.
Several of these books have already been recognized for their
scholarly contribution, including award-winning titles that are now
freely available for course adoption, citation, and research use
worldwide. As these works become open to everyone, they will reach new
audiences, travel more easily into classrooms, and support scholarship
across institutions regardless of budget.
Today, more than 250 libraries and nearly 50 publishers participate
in Path to Open, demonstrating its viability as a financially
sustainable, ongoing model for open access book publishing.
Later this spring, the Path to Open Community Advisory Committee will
share updates on next steps for the initiative, including how community
feedback will help inform its future direction. In the meantime, libraries are invited to continue joining the program to help shape—and benefit from—the next phase of this evolving model.
For a deeper look at the origins of Path to Open, the newly open
titles, and what this milestone means for participating publishers and
libraries, read the article “Celebrating 100 Path to Open books becoming open access” by John Lenahan, Vice President of Published Content at JSTOR.
More at:
******************************************************
Boletines SciELO-México sobre:
Acceso abierto
APCs
Autoría
Bibliometría
Ciencia abierta
Citas abiertas-Open Citations
Creative Commons
Comunicación científica: la ciencia y su publicación
Datos abiertos
Dictaminación abierta
Evaluación académica
Geopolítica de la ciencia
IA, investigación y comunicación científicas
México-Ciencia
ORCID
Preprints - Información, fuentes y debates
Preservación digital
Publicación continua
Rankings
Reproducibilidad
Retractación
Resúmenes/Abstracts
Revistas depredadoras
Videos