Overview of the culture and regulation of open access in Spain
In Spain, the national 2011 "Ley de la Ciencia, la Tecnología y la Innovación" (Science, Technology and Innovation Act) requiresopen access publishing for research that has been produced with public funding.[1][2] The first peer-reviewed open access Spanish journal, Relieve, began in 1995.[3] Publishers CSIC Press and Hipatia Press belong to the international Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association.[4]
Repositories
There are a number of collections of scholarship in Spain housed in digital open access repositories.[5] They contain journal articles, book chapters, data, and other research outputs that are free to read. As of March 2018, the UK-based Directory of Open Access Repositories lists some 131 repositories in Spain.[5] Those with the most digital assets include Revistes Catalanes amb Accés Obert, Tesis Doctorals en Xarxa, GREDOS (of Universidad de Salamanca), Biblioteca Virtual del Patrimonio Bibliográfico (of Ministry of Culture), and Digital CSIC (of Spanish National Research Council).[1] Related to this are SciELO and DialNet.
Most universities in Spain maintain an institutional repository, collectively searchable via the "Recolecta" digital platform.[6][7]
Á. Borrego (2015). "Measuring compliance with a Spanish Government open access mandate". Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 67 (4): 757–764. doi:10.1002/asi.23422. hdl:2445/66332. S2CID20807814.
Walt Crawford (2018). "Spain". Gold Open Access by Country 2012-2017. US: Cites & Insights Books.
Maria‐Francisca Abad‐García (2018). "Effectiveness of OpenAIRE, BASE, Recolecta, and Google Scholar at finding Spanish articles in repositories". Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology. 69.
"Acceso Abierto". Accesoabierto.net (in Spanish and Catalan). (General information website about the progress of open access in Spain and other Spanish-speaking places)