by Caroline Winter | 20 November 2020 | English, Observations, Observations and Responses
In July 2020, cOAlition S released its Rights Retention Strategy (RRS). With this strategy, funding organizations will mandate that researchers apply a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) licence to their research before it is submitted for publication (cOAlition S 2020a). This will allow researchers to retain the intellectual rights necessary for sharing Author Accepted Manuscripts (AAMs) or Versions of Record (VORs) in an OA repository upon publication, even when publishing in a subscription or hybrid journal (see Rooryck 2020).
by Caroline Winter | 6 November 2020 | English, Observations, Observations and Responses
In February 2020, the Government of Canada released the Roadmap for Open Science, a set of principles and recommendations to guide federal scientific research in Canada.
by Caroline Winter | 6 November 2020 | French, Observations, Observations and Responses
En février 2020, le gouvernement du Canada a publié la Feuille de route pour la science ouverte, un ensemble de principes et de recommandations pour guider la recherche scientifique fédérale au Canada.
by Caroline Winter | 23 October 2020 | English, Observations, Observations and Responses
On May 6 and 7, 2019, the Canadian Association of Research Libraries (CARL–ABRC) hosted Advancing Open, an unconference-style gathering for Canadian scholarly communication practitioners to discuss ways to advance open scholarship in Canada.
by Caroline Winter | 23 October 2020 | French, Observations, Observations and Responses
Les 6 et 7 mai 2019, l’Association canadienne des bibliothèques de recherche (ABRC–CARL) a organisé Advancing Open, un atelier de style non-conférence pour les praticiens canadiens de la communication savante afin de discuter des moyens de faire progresser la science ouvertes au Canada.
by Caroline Winter | 25 September 2020 | French, Observations, Observations and Responses
Dans un article pour The Scholarly Kitchen en juin 2020, Alice Meadows soutient que maintenant, alors que la pandémie COVID-19 a conduit à des niveaux sans précédent d’ouverture et de collaboration entre les chercheurs du monde entier, la construction d’une infrastructure de recherche solide et stable est plus importante que jamais (Meadows 2020; voir aussi « Science Ouverte et COVID-19 »).