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    Home»National

    One Nation One Subscription: 13,400 Journals Powering India’s Research Boom

    Riddhi JainRiddhi Jain National 4 Mins Read
    One Nation One Subscription: 13,400 Journals Powering India’s Research Boom-PNN
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    One Nation One Subscription: For years, scholarly journals have been prohibitively expensive. Most Indian institutions, especially state universities and smaller colleges, simply could not afford subscriptions to leading global research databases. The result was predictable: unequal access, uneven research quality, and bright students forced to rely on abstracts instead of full academic papers. Over time, this created a silent but serious knowledge divide.

    At scale, One Nation One Subscription (ONOS) addresses this gap. Under the initiative, the Government of India is brokering national-level licenses for academic journals and research publications, making them accessible to students, researchers, and faculty across institutions. Access is no longer selective or privilege-driven. It is national. This is not symbolism. It is infrastructure.

    The ₹6,000 Crore Question

    Yes, the number matters. ONOS is backed by a ₹6,000 crore investment coordinated by INFLIBNET, the government’s nodal body for academic digital infrastructure. This funding is not about optics. It is about leverage.

    Instead of thousands of institutions negotiating separately with global publishers, India now negotiates as a single entity. That shift changes the equation overnight. The country gains broader coverage, lower cost per user, and stronger negotiating power. According to official details, ONOS will provide access to over 13,400 academic publication sources spanning science, medicine, social sciences, and the humanities. At this scale, access does not just improve availability. It reshapes academic behaviour, expectations, and outcomes.

    How One Nation One Subscription Transforms the Student Experience

    The real impact of

    One Nation One Subscription

    is felt at the ground level. A postgraduate student in a tier-2 city can now read the same journals as a student in a top central university. A doctoral scholar no longer waits weeks for an overseas contact to share a PDF. Faculty members can assign readings without worrying about paywalls blocking students.

    The effect is immediate and practical. Research timelines shrink. Output quality improves. Academic confidence rises. As reported in national coverage, more than 1.8 crore students are expected to benefit from the initiative. This is not an elite reform designed for a handful of institutions. It is academic mass empowerment. Unlike many reforms that take years to show impact, ONOS solves a daily, lived problem for students and researchers.

    Why This Matters Beyond Campus

    ONOS is not just an education policy. It is an economic one. Countries that dominate globally do so by gaining early and broad access to knowledge. ONOS supports India’s transition from service-led growth to research-driven development by strengthening the foundation of innovation.

    Better access to research enables:

    • Stronger patents and intellectual property

    • More credible policy research

    • Faster innovation cycles

    • Globally competitive scholarship

    The initiative also aligns with India’s Digital Public Infrastructure approach, where access to essential systems is treated as a civic right rather than a luxury. Knowledge, like roads or electricity, becomes more powerful when shared at scale.

    Libraries, Universities, and the New Academic Map

    ONOS quietly redefines the role of academic libraries. Libraries move away from being gatekeepers of scarcity and become facilitators of abundance. Librarians are no longer forced to fight budget constraints to choose which journals to drop each year.

    For newer and regional universities, the impact is transformative. Institutional credibility improves, faculty recruitment becomes easier, and research output rises. This matters because academic ecosystems often skew in favour of already-privileged institutions. ONOS does not dilute excellence. It expands the base that excellence can emerge from.

    India’s Knowledge Economy Moment

    India has spoken for years about becoming a knowledge economy. ONOS is one of the few policies that actually builds the necessary plumbing. There are no slogans, no marketing gloss, and no inflated promises. Just access.

    The most effective reforms often appear unremarkable at launch. This one will age well. Years from now, when Indian research citations increase and global collaborations deepen, ONOS will be recognised as a quiet but decisive turning point. Not loud. Not flashy. Just firm, national, and built to last.

    Cabinet approves One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
    https://www.pmindia.gov.in/en/news_updates/cabinet-approves-one-nation-one-subscription-onos/

    http://onos.gov.in/

    PNN News

    Riddhi Jain

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