by Caroline Winter | 18 March 2022 | French, Observations, Observations and Responses
nfrastructure de recherche ouverte et dirigée par la communauté et travaille à des modèles de financement coordonnés et durables. En août 2021, IOI a publié le rapport final du projet « Future of Open Scholarship (FOS) ». Ce projet de recherche vise à développer un modèle ouvert et durable pour l’infrastructure de recherche, que IOI définit sur son site Web comme l’ensemble de services, de normes, de protocoles et de logiciels dont l’écosystème universitaire a besoin pour remplir ses fonctions tout au long du cycle de vie de la recherche.
by Caroline Winter | 18 March 2022 | English, Observations, Observations and Responses
open, community-led research infrastructure and works toward coordinated and sustainable funding models. In August 2021, IOI released the final report from the Future of Open Scholarship (FOS) project. This research project aims to develop a sustainable, open model for research infrastructure, which IOI defines on its website as “the sets of services, protocols, standards and software that the academic ecosystem needs in order to perform its functions throughout the research lifecycle.”
by Caroline Winter | 4 March 2022 | French, Observations, Observations and Responses
En janvier 2018, l’Association des bibliothèques de recherche du Canada (ABRC) a entamé une collaboration avec OpenAIRE, une organisation européenne d’infrastructure de science ouverte, dans le but d’améliorer la visibilité de la recherche canadienne. L’un des résultats de cette collaboration est Canada Explore, un portail de recherche dans les dépôts institutionnels canadiens.
by Caroline Winter | 4 March 2022 | English, Observations, Observations and Responses
In January 2018, the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) began a collaboration with OpenAIRE, a European Open Science infrastructure organization, with the goal of improving the visibility of Canadian research. One of the outcomes of this collaboration is Canada Explore, a portal to research in Canadian institutional repositories.
by Caroline Winter | 11 February 2022 | English, Observations, Observations and Responses
The National Heritage Digitisation Strategy (NHDS) is part of a long history of digitizing cultural heritage materials that has been ongoing in the Canadian scholarly and heritage communities since at least the 1960s, moving in step with developments in digital technologies, including the world wide web. This history includes digitization strategies developed by the Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions (CIHM) and the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL) starting in the 1970s, the digital libraries initiative of the 1990s, and the Canadian Research Knowledge Network (CRKN) and Canadiana in the 2000s.