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Community designed, community driven. The last few years have been full of change for the scholarly publishing community. We’ve seen …
To provide a personalized competency-based learning model, public schools would require a dramatic change in a paradigm that has lasted longer than a hundred years.
The primary goal of the new Climate Change Cooperative is: “…[to maximize] the influence of Climate Change research” through helping to “broaden the discovery and understanding of climate change research — and accelerate its application towards a sustainable future.”
Second in a series of three symposia, “UN Sustainable Development Goals: The Way Ahead for Publishing and the Content Industries” was recorded at the IFRRO International Conference 2021 on 10 November.
The session will look at best practices for implementing the UN Sustainable Development Goals and ask how RROs and the wider copyright community can get involved in and contribute to efforts towards achieving quality education, gender equality and responsible consumption and production.
UKRI’s Head of Open Research Rachel Bruce outlines the policy and highlights key changes for publishers and researchers and Rob Johnson, Founder and Managing Director, Research Consulting, led the discussion. Participants also included David Prosser, Executive Director, Research Libraries UK (RLUK) and Ros Pyne, Global Director, Research and Open Access, Bloomsbury Publishing.
To date, Open Access has clearly improved the accessibility of significant swathes of the scholarly and scientific publishing universes.
Several copyright and licensing stories of interest have captured our attention during recent months.
After almost 20 years of informal and then formal meetings among various groups of stakeholders and then with members of Congress, the Copyright Act of 1976 was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Gerald Ford.
CCC presents a webcast case study on RightsLink for Scientific Communication and their work with helping the leading Open Access publisher PLOS to develop its Community Action Publishing model. Principal guest Niamh O’Connor, Chief Publishing Officer, PLOS, is joined by CCC’s Jamie Carmichael and Chuck Hemenway.