Where Open Access Librarians Work: Institution Types and Settings
Which types of institutions actually hire open access librarians, and how much does the employer shape the day-to-day work?
The answer varies more than many MLIS students expect. Open access roles exist across a spectrum of organizations, each with distinct priorities and workflows. Understanding these differences can help you target your job search and tailor your skill set during your masters in library science program.
R1 and R2 Research Universities
Universities with active research agendas represent the largest share of open access and scholarly communication librarian postings. Based on recent job listing data, colleges and universities dominate the hiring landscape for these roles.1 At a research university, your work typically centers on faculty outreach, funder-compliance support, and managing an institutional repository. You might spend a given week training a chemistry department on deposit requirements, reviewing publisher agreements for rights retention, or analyzing campus publication data to demonstrate the reach of open scholarship.
Liberal Arts Colleges
Smaller institutions are increasingly adopting open access mandates, creating new positions that blend OA duties with broader liaison responsibilities. A scholarly communication librarian at a liberal arts college may wear several hats, combining repository management with instruction or collection development. Recent postings from schools like Georgia College and State University illustrate this trend.1
Library Consortia
Organizations such as HathiTrust and LYRASIS hire OA specialists to build and maintain shared infrastructure rather than serve a single campus. A consortial open access librarian focuses on platform development, collective licensing negotiations, and policy coordination across member institutions. The scope is broader and more systems-oriented than a campus-based role.
Non-Academic Employers
Research funders like the Wellcome Trust and the Gates Foundation employ specialists to design and enforce open access policies tied to grant funding. Government agencies, including NIH and NASA, also need professionals who understand repository standards and compliance monitoring.3 Internationally, organizations such as cOAlition S and JISC in the UK hire OA specialists to advance policy frameworks across borders. Research institutes, including the Wellcome Sanger Institute, maintain libraries that actively facilitate open access as part of daily operations. For a broader look at where an MLIS can take you, explore library science degree jobs.
Remote and Hybrid Availability
Prospective applicants often ask whether these roles can be performed remotely. Current data suggests that fully remote open access librarian positions remain uncommon. In a recent sample of scholarly communication librarian postings tracked through sources like ALA JobLIST and Open Education Jobs, roughly 85 to 90 percent of roles required on-site presence.1 Only about 10 to 15 percent offered remote arrangements, and hybrid options appeared infrequently.2 Tasks like repository management and policy advising are technically location-independent, but employers still tend to value in-person collaboration for faculty outreach and campus engagement. That said, some technology-adjacent roles at universities and consortia are beginning to list hybrid or remote options, a trend worth watching as it evolves.
The institution you choose shapes not just your title but the core of your work. A university role puts you face to face with researchers navigating compliance deadlines. A consortial position immerses you in infrastructure and cross-institutional strategy. A funder role places you at the policy-making table. Knowing which setting fits your strengths will sharpen both your MLIS coursework choices and your job applications.