From: Internal announcement list for JISC Advance  [JISC-ADVANCE-STAFF@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Daniel McCaffrey  [danmccaffrey@RSC-SOUTH-WEST.AC.UK]
Sent: 16 November 2011 15:16
To: JISC-ADVANCE-STAFF@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject:  Re: JISC Open Campaign Steering Group-Request
Dear Colleagues,
I'm  one of the JISC Advance representatives on the steering group orchestrating  JISC's national "Open" campaign. 
The group are engaged in planning  promotional activities for JISC to push the "open" agenda to supported  Institutions.  Can any RSC/JISC Advance colleagues avail me of any Open-related  comms activity coming up in the new year that would benefit from being promoted  on a corporate level, as JISC aim to  create a calendar of relevant activities  to push throughout the campaign.
If you have anything of  interest, please let me know.
Best Wishes, Dan McCaffrey
Wednesday, 16 November 2011
Monday, 14 November 2011
Beyond Open Access - new technology provides appropriate methodologies for sharing research knowledge in the developing world
Beyond Open Access 
– new opportunities for scholarly communication in developing countries
Leslie Chan, Trustee of EPT and Director of Bioline International, presented the following video at the recent BioMedCentral Open Access Africa Conference held at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana, see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wJXcm-xTfU&feature=youtu.be. As well as outlining the aims and the resources available from Bioline International and the usage that is made globally of developing country research from this platform, he discussed the need for a rethink on the evaluation of research articles and journals, based on their relevance to development in emerging countries of the world. He emphasised that the goal of Bioline International is not solely a means of increasing the Impact Factor of journals based on Northern values and suggested that the future of sharing research globally will be met in additional ways than by traditional journals. He introduced the concepts of networked knowledge, open science and a new invisible college, and explains how these new technologies are more appropriate for the advancement of research in the developing world. 
Thursday, 10 November 2011
Just 19 days left to send nominations for the EPT OA Award
Colleagues, this is a reminder that if you wish to make a nomination for the EPT open access award for individuals in developing countries that have made a significant contribution to the progress of Open Access, there are only 21 days left before nominations close. Click here to get all details. We look forward to hearing from you.
Saturday, 5 November 2011
Two studies of the use of OA journals in India
Two publications on the use of OA journals by researchers in India have been published recently in Current Science. Below are the conclusions and a link to the full texts. Between them they provide a comprehensive picture of the status of OA in India.
[1]  Subbiah  Gunasekaran and Subbiah Arunachalam: Use of open  access journals by Indian researchers: CURRENT  SCIENCE, VOL. 101, NO. 10,  25  NOVEMBER  2011, Page 1287-1295. For the full text (which includes many tables and graphs) see http://www.ias.ac.in/currsci/forthcoming/GA2282.pdf
Conclusion: 
OA to research  findings can be provided by two ways: by publishing the papers in OA journals  (the gold route) and or by placing the full text of the papers along with  metadata in interoperable OA archives (the green route). At least three leading  publishers of S&T journals in India have opted to go the OA way. MedKnow  publishes more than 150 OA journals. The Indian Academy of Sciences, Bangalore,  adopted OA for all its journals more than ten years ago. Indeed, Pramana,  its physics journal, was made open access in July 1998. More recently, CSIR made  all 16 research journals published by the National Institute of Science  Communication and Information Resources OA. A few years ago the Indian Council  of Medical Research made the Indian Journal of Medical Research OA. While  these moves are certainly welcome, we believe that the OA archives route is the  ideal solution, especially for developing countries. No matter whether they  publish their papers in OA or toll-access journals, Indian researchers will do  well to place the full text of their papers in institutional repositories.  Stevan Harnad, founder of Psycoloquy stopped publishing the journal in  2001, as it became clear to him by then that author self-archiving in  interoperable institutional repositories was the best route to ensure 100% OA to  the world’s scholarly literature. 
In November  2009, 41 Nobel laureates wrote an open letter to the US Congress expressing  their support to OA to research.  They believed that the open availability of research ‘will make it easier for  scientists worldwide to better and more  swiftly address the complex scientific challenges that we face today and expand  shared knowledge across disciplines to accelerate breakthrough and spur  innovation’. P. Balaram  told SciDev.Net; ‘I think every institution should be encouraged to set  up a repository. This is a problem-free model I want to promote. There may be a  few glitches at the start, but the next generation of scientists will be  comfortable with it’. In a recent  blog posting, Giridhar said, ‘The best  way to make the work open access in India is not necessarily by publishing it in  open access journals but by depositing the article in an institutional  repository’. The Indian Academy of Sciences has recently set up a repository for  papers by all its Fellows, both living and deceased. As of 7 October 2011, more  than 60,500 paper/documents were deposited, but a vast majority of them do not  provide access to the full text. One has to be content with metadata and  abstracts. CSIR has decided to set up repositories in each one of its more than  35 laboratories.
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Conclusion
Indian  researchers publish a large number of papers in OA journals, not  necessarily because more than 360 Indian journals are OA. Their  contribution to high-impact international biomedical OA journals is  modest at best. However, India’s contribution to Acta Crystallographica  Section E: Structure Reports is substantial. There are two reasons for  this: India has a strong and vibrant community of inorganic  crystallographers and the journal charges only $ 150 for processing a  paper. A similar study on India’s participation in international OA  journals in other fields, such as physics, chemistry, earth sciences and  engineering will be interesting. Ideally though, Indian researchers and  funding agencies should prefer the institutional archiving route  recommended by both Harnad1,18 and Balaram. One hundred per cent OA  through archiving should be the national goal. As pointed out by Joshi  and as has been demonstrated most recently by the Central Marine  Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi, starting and filling an  institutional EPrints archive is easy, inexpensive, and immensely  beneficial to all. However, six years after the first workshop on  setting up OA repositories was held in May 2004, we have not more than  40 active repositories in the country. We believe that such repositories  would come up in most, if not all, higher educational and research  institutions in the country if the Ministers in charge of both higher  education and science and technology send out a note stating that from  now on all publicly-funded research should be available through OA  channels.
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