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Some common ways that people choose to share content are:
We recognise that sharing content is an important part of research and collaboration – vital to disseminating findings, stimulating discussion, and advancing research.
By “responsible sharing” we mean sharing content in ways that respect publishers’ policies about which versions of content can be shared and how. This helps ensure the sustainability of the work we do producing the high-quality publications on which research and learning depend.
An important aspect of publishing is ensuring that our customers, such as university libraries, understand the value that our products have for them. One of the ways that we demonstrate value to librarians is to provide detailed usage reports about our content. Measuring usage is also important to the researchers and authors who publish with Cambridge, to help them demonstrate the impact of their work.
When content is shared in ways that don’t respect our policies, especially on third-party websites, it is difficult or impossible for us to measure the usage of that content. This makes it more difficult for librarians to make informed decisions about the value that our content has for them, and risks undermining the sustainability of the high-quality publications on which research and learning depend.
As an author we always permit you to share and re-use your final, published work in some ways, for example in subsequent publications of which you are also an author. Please see our permissions FAQs for more information.
For content that is published Gold Open Access under a Creative Commons licence, anyone (including you) may share and re-use that content in accordance with the terms of that licence. Please see our information about Creative Commons licences.
In many of our journals, Cambridge Core Share enables you to share the final, published version of your article regardless of whether it was published Gold Open Access. To find out whether a journal participates in Cambridge Core Share, please refer to the ‘Journal information’ section of the journal home page, and look under ‘Journal policies’ for the ‘Open access options’ page.
We also have policies that permit you to share earlier, pre-publication versions of your manuscript in various ways. You can find more information about these on the following policy pages:
Yes, although please be aware that there may be a fee associated with this.
For journal articles, please follow or guidance on converting an article to open access.
For books or Elements, please contact your Cambridge editor .
This depends on the licence that the content was published under.
For all content published Gold Open Access under a Creative Commons licence, anyone may share and re-use that content in accordance with the terms of that licence. Please see our information about Creative Commons licences.
Many of our journals also offer Cambridge Core Share as a way of sharing articles, even if they have not been published Gold Open Access. To find out whether a journal participates in Cambridge Core Share, please refer to the ‘Journal information’ section of the journal home page, and look under ‘Journal policies’ for the ‘Open access options’ page.
For permission to share content in other ways, please refer to our rights and permissions page and our permissions FAQs .