| December 2005 January 2006 |
| SPARC E-News From the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalitionhttp://www.arl.org/sparc, http://www.sparceurope.org Online at http://www.arl.org/sparc/pubs/enews/dec05.html Responses and subscription requests to alison@arl.org
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IN THIS ISSUE: |
| 1. SPARC News: |
SPARC Partners with Science Commons The effort represents a continuation of Science Commons' effort to promote access and voluntary sharing in scientific publications. This cooperation advances three goals shared by SPARC and Science Commons: to support authors right to distribute scholarship over the Internet, to promote access and reuse of the scientific literature, and to facilitate author self-archiving. For more information about the enhanced SPARC Author Addendum, please see www.arl.org/sparc.
New SPARC Europe Award The judging panel, formed from members of the SPARC Europe Board of Directors, has issued a call for nominations for the Award. Nominations are open to all who have made major contributions in the field of scholarly communications, and the judging panel particularly wishes to receive nominations of individuals of groups working in any of the following areas: --Research that helps illuminate the scholarly communications landscape Nominations (together with a short outline of the nominee’s work) should be sent to David Prosser (d.prosser@bodley.ox.ac.uk), Director of SPARC Europe, no later than February 10, 2006. The Award will be present at the Third Nordic Conference on Scholarly Communication, to be held at Lund, Sweden, April 24-25, 2006.
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| 2. Partner News |
SPARC members are encouraged to apply their purchase commitment to support these worthwhile publications.
Project Euclid The Cornell University Library (CUL) has drafted an interim plan to manage, archive and preserve all the participating Project Euclid journals in advance of the launch of Cornell University Library's Open Archival Information System (OAIS) in 2008. Cornell's OAIS will ensure the long-term management and digital preservation of Cornell's digital assets, including the 40+ mathematics and statistics journals that participate in Project Euclid. The interim asset management plan acknowledges that digital preservation is a shared responsibility and commits Cornell and the Project Euclid publishers to a series of activities over the next two years that will firmly establish a digital preservation program for protecting and maintaining their digital content. The interim plan will be implemented in early 2006 and cover the two-year period when the OAIS is under development. In 2008 Project Euclid, CUL, and Euclid's partner publishers will review and devise an extended OAIS-compliant preservation plan and explore opportunities for cost recovery to ensure access for future generations of mathematicians and statisticians. A copy of the interim plan is available at http://projecteuclid.org/webdocs/ProjectEuclid-Preservation2006.pdf.
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy The California Digital Library (CDL), on behalf of the ten campuses of the University of California, approved sponsorship of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP). This represents a full commitment by all of the libraries in the UC system, eight of whose campuses offer degrees in philosophy. In related news, SEP is steadily progressing towards its goal of raising $2.5 million in total three-year commitments from the library community, which, if successful, would generate an additional $500,000 from the National Endowment for the Humanities. By the end of December, SEP had registered commitments of $1.195 million, which is nearly half-way toward its three-year goal. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy International Association (SEPIA), the membership organization formed to support SEP, continues to collect membership dues from other libraries and library consortia worldwide. Learn more about SEPIA at http://www.libraries.iub.edu/index.php?pageId=3563. To register your commitment, go to http://www.solinet.net/survey/sep.htm. For a list of libraries already committed to the project, see http://plato.stanford.edu/fundraising/commitments.html. SPARC recommends that its member use their purchase commitment to support SEP. |
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New University of California White Papers * Evaluation of Publications in Academic Personnel Processes For more information: http://osc.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/. ---------------
xPharm is a comprehensive and authoritative collection of pharmacological data, with chemical agents representing examples of pharmacological activity. The contribution of xPharm structures marks the first step in Elsevier MDL's efforts to support the NIH Roadmap initiative, according to Elsevier. ---------------
Next year, OARE will be offered to users in 70 developing nations with a per capita gross national product (GNP) of $1,000 or less in the first phase of the project's implementation. In the project's second phase, approximately 45 more countries with GNP per capita between $1,000 and $3,000 will be enrolled. Yale will develop OARE in cooperation with the United Nations Environment Programme, the World Health Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization, Cornell University and leading scientific publishers around the world. ---------------
Establishing governance and, possibly, funding mechanisms for the DSpace open source community will help to ensure that the technology platform remains sound, protecting the investment that institutions have made. Updates will be sent to DSpace-general and posted on http://wiki.dspace.org/DSpaceGovernance.
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“Cures” Legislation The bill calls for DHHS-funded research be made available in NIH’s PubMed Central online digital archive within four months of publication in a peer-reviewed journal. The NIH already has a policy that asks its investigators to deposit their manuscripts in PubMed Central, but the policy is voluntary and public access can be delayed up to a year. NIH estimates that less than five percent of eligible research is making its way into PubMed Central under their current policy. The Cures Bill would require deposit of refereed articles and reach beyond NIH. It would also provide access sooner than the NIH policy. For more information: http://www.taxpayeraccess.org/. ---------------
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One theme of _OA Librarian_ is highlighting the work of librarians who advocate for apen access. Recent articles focus on Antonella de Robbio, the originator of E-LIS; Anita Coleman, the driving force behind DLIST; and Charles W. Bailey, Jr., the author of the Open Access Bibliography: Liberating Scholarly Literature with E-Prints and Open Access Journals. Please visit: http://oalibrarian.blogspot.com/. ---------------
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***SAVE THE DATE***
Information Society Project/Access to Knowledge Conference
Third Nordic Conference on Scholarly Communication:
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Send corrections, comments and responses to Alison Buckholtz. Want to receive SPARC E-News in your email inbox? Fill out and submit the online form for a complementary subscription. © SPARC 2006. |
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