CoARA’s action plan framework requires every signatory to publish, within a year of joining, a time-bound roadmap for reforming its research-assessment criteria, and to show progress at a five-year checkpoint due at the end of 2027. Three years after the Coalition’s November 2022 launch, membership has grown from roughly 100 founding organisations to more than 830 — yet CoARA’s own public tracker shows most signatories have not yet deposited a citable action plan, which is the real test of whether this is reform or box-ticking.
The CoARA action plan is the documented, time-bound roadmap each Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment signatory must publish, setting out how it will revise the criteria, tools and processes it uses to evaluate research, researchers and research-performing organisations against the Agreement’s core commitments.
- What does the CoARA action plan actually require?
- Has reform reached hiring, promotion and grant criteria?
- How many signatories have actually filed an action plan?
- CoARA vs DORA: does history repeat itself?
- Common questions about the CoARA action plan
- What this means for research administrators
- Outlook: what would count as proof by 2027?
What does the CoARA action plan actually require?
The Agreement on Reforming Research Assessment (ARRA) obliges signatories to review or develop criteria, tools and processes against ten core commitments, and to record that process as an action plan with defined milestones. Under CoARA’s own guidance, the first plan is due within one year of signing (eighteen months for early signatories), with a further checkpoint at the end of 2027, by which point signatories must have completed at least one full review-and-development cycle.
Crucially, CoARA imposes no fixed template. Organisations have “full freedom” in how they design their plan, and the Coalition explicitly asks signatories not to duplicate existing responsible-assessment work. That flexibility is defensible for a coalition spanning universities, funders, academies and research infrastructures — but it also means the Coalition has no standard unit for measuring whether commitments are being kept, only a request that plans be deposited publicly via a shared Zenodo collection.
Has reform reached hiring, promotion and grant criteria?
Some of the evidence is concrete. Loughborough University’s action plan, deposited in October 2023, embeds existing responsible research assessment practice into formal review criteria rather than treating CoARA as a new bolt-on process. Goldsmiths, University of London published a 2024–2029 plan explicitly tied to promotion and appraisal reform, and the University of Edinburgh deposited an updated plan in 2025 addressing how researchers and research-support staff are evaluated.
Funders have moved too. Denmark’s Independent Research Fund (DFF) published an updated action plan in May 2025 that tracks delivery status against each commitment — a rare example of a signatory reporting progress rather than just intent. Italy’s national evaluation agency, ANVUR, has a 2024–2027 plan aimed at aligning national research-assessment criteria, not just one institution’s, with CoARA principles.
These cases show the mechanism can produce real, checkable change in grant review and promotion documentation. The open question is how representative they are of the Coalition as a whole.
How many signatories have actually filed an action plan?
CoARA’s own live tracker — “Action Plans: Submitted & Pending to Date” — lists roughly 660 organisation entries with a due date for their first action plan. Of those, only around 136 carry an actual Zenodo DOI, meaning a plan has been deposited and made citable. The remaining entries, including many whose plans were originally due back in October 2023, are still marked “Pending” three years on.
That is a completion rate of roughly one in five against CoARA’s own one-year deadline. It does not necessarily mean four in five signatories have done nothing internally — some may be reforming quietly without depositing paperwork — but it is the single clearest, most falsifiable indicator CoARA itself publishes, and it currently favours the “declaratory” reading of the Coalition’s progress over the “reformed” one.
| Metric | Figure (CoARA live tracker, accessed July 2026) |
|---|---|
| Organisation-level action plan entries tracked | ~660 |
| Entries with a deposited, citable action plan (DOI issued) | ~136 (≈21%) |
| Entries still marked “Pending” | ~514 (≈78%) |
| Total current CoARA member organisations | 834, across 60+ countries |
CoARA vs DORA: does history repeat itself?
CoARA did not invent the credibility problem it now faces. The San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA), launched in 2012 to curb inappropriate use of the Journal Impact Factor, has accumulated more than 27,000 individual and organisational signatures across 174 countries, according to sfdora.org’s own signer registry. Yet studies of research, promotion and tenure documents have repeatedly found continued reliance on journal-based metrics at institutions that formally signed DORA years earlier — a gap between signature and practice that critics now cite as the precedent CoARA risks repeating.
CoARA’s design tries to close that gap by making the action plan, not the signature, the operative commitment, with a public deposit requirement and a 2027 checkpoint. A 2024 critique circulated on arXiv (Baccini et al.) argued the opposite risk: that shifting assessment toward qualitative, panel-based peer review could trade transparent metric-driven gatekeeping for a less transparent, harder-to-audit equivalent. Both critiques point to the same underlying test — not whether an organisation signs, but whether its actual review paperwork changes.
| Feature | DORA (2012) | CoARA (2022) |
|---|---|---|
| Core ask | Stop using Journal Impact Factor as a proxy for quality in funding, hiring and promotion | Ten commitments on qualitative, diverse and open research assessment |
| Accountability mechanism | Voluntary signature; no mandatory public action plan | Mandatory action plan within one year, deposited on Zenodo, checkpoint by end of 2027 |
| Current scale | 27,000+ signatures, 174 countries (sfdora.org) | 834 member organisations, 60+ countries (coara.org) |
| Documented gap | Continued JIF use found in signatory RPT criteria | ~78% of due action-plan entries still “Pending” on CoARA’s own tracker |
Common questions about the CoARA action plan
What is CoARA research?
The Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment is a membership body of universities, funders, academies and research infrastructures committed to reforming how research, researchers and research-performing organisations are evaluated. It operates under the Agreement on Reforming Research Assessment, signed from November 2022, which sets shared commitments rather than a single enforced standard.
What are CoARA National Chapters?
CoARA National Chapters are country- or region-specific groups, such as the chapter for Ireland, that help local signatories interpret the Agreement’s commitments in their own funding, promotion and language context. They provide practical support for drafting action plans and coordinate national-level alignment with funder policy, including engagement with existing metrics guidance such as DORA.
Is CoARA the same as DORA?
No. DORA is a narrower 2012 declaration focused specifically on removing inappropriate Journal Impact Factor use from assessment. CoARA is a broader 2022 coalition with ten commitments covering qualitative assessment, output diversity and open science, and it requires a public, time-bound action plan rather than a one-off signature.
How many organisations have signed CoARA?
CoARA’s live membership register lists 834 organisations across more than 60 countries as of mid-2026, up from just over 100 at the November 2022 launch. Growth in membership has significantly outpaced growth in verified, publicly deposited action plans over the same period.
What this means for research administrators
For institutional leaders and research-administration teams, CoARA membership is not self-certifying reform. Signing the Agreement creates a public commitment; only a deposited, dated action plan against the ten commitments creates an auditable one. Institutions that have not yet filed should treat the gap as reputational exposure, not paperwork.
- Check whether your organisation’s action plan (if due) has been deposited to the CoARA Zenodo collection, not just drafted internally.
- Map each commitment against a specific, named change to hiring, promotion or grant-review criteria — not a general statement of intent.
- Use the 2027 checkpoint as an internal deadline for demonstrating at least one completed review-and-development cycle, in line with the ARRA’s own timeframe.
Outlook: what would count as proof by 2027?
CoARA’s five-year touchpoint at the end of 2027 is the moment the “reform or box-ticking” question gets a real answer. If the proportion of signatories with a deposited, dated action plan rises substantially from today’s roughly one-in-five, and if more funders publish delivery-tracked updates in the style of Denmark’s DFF, the declaratory reading weakens. If the Pending column stays this full, CoARA will have reproduced the exact credibility gap DORA has spent over a decade trying to close.