Open Acces Policy
Open Access Policy
Econetica: Jurnal Sosial, Ekonomi dan Bisnis Title alignment under evaluation by BRIN for ISSN records
Econetica provides immediate open access to all its content. This policy rests on the principle that research made freely available to the public fosters a broader global exchange of knowledge. The journal is an Open Access Journal. All content is accessible without charge to users or institutions. Users may read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of articles without prior permission from the publisher or authors. This commitment aligns with the Budapest Open Access Initiative.
- Read and download full texts
- Copy and distribute for lawful purposes
- Print and link to articles
- Search and index the content
No subscription or paywall. No article processing charges. Immediate availability upon publication.
Open access advances education, accelerates research, and supports equitable participation in knowledge production.
Budapest Open Access Initiative
An old tradition and a new technology have converged to make possible an unprecedented public good. The old tradition is the willingness of scholars to publish research without payment, and the new technology is the internet. Together, they enable worldwide access to peer reviewed literature without restrictions that advances education, accelerates research, and empowers global collaboration.
Open Access refers to the free availability of scholarly literature on the public internet. It permits users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to full texts, to crawl them for indexing, or to use them for any lawful purpose, without financial, legal, or technical barriers.
While producing scholarly work is not costless, studies such as Odlyzko 1997 indicate that open access can reduce dissemination costs significantly. Institutions and governments are encouraged to support open access models to maximize public access and research utility.
Authors are encouraged to deposit refereed articles in open electronic archives compliant with the Open Archives Initiative.
Scholars are encouraged to establish or support journals that offer immediate and unrestricted access to published articles.
Historical note and signatories
Date February 14, 2002 Place Budapest, Hungary
Signatories include Leslie Chan Bioline International, Darius Cuplinskas Open Society Institute, Michael Eisen Public Library of Science, Fred Friend University College London, Jean Claude Guédon University of Montreal, Stevan Harnad University of Southampton and UQAM, Peter Suber Earlham College, Rick Johnson SPARC, Yana Genova Next Page Foundation, István Rév Open Society Archives, Monika Segbert eIFL Project Consultant, Jan Velterop BioMed Central.
Initial funding was provided by the Open Society Institute which invites collaboration from governments, libraries, publishers, and scholars to make research universally accessible.
Note. This Open Access policy applies uniformly to all issues and articles of the journal. The journal title is currently in formal review by BRIN to harmonize the electronic and print records. For licensing specifics such as reuse and remix permissions, please refer to the License statement on this site.