Incoming Feed Items
Primary tabs
Open Access Australasia
Open Access Australasia comment on US White House OSTP Public Access Guidance β Open Access Australasia β
The US has ruled all taxpayer-funded research must be free to read. Whatβs the benefit of open access? β Open Access Australasia β
Open access research repositories provide diversity and innovation publishers canβt match β they have a critical role in archiving, preserving and sharing the diverse content produced by universities β Open Access Australasia β
Webinar 5: Supporting equity and diversity within scholarly communications: the DOAJ β Open Access Australasia β
Webinar 4: How the Power and Diversity of Citizen Science Globally supports the UNESCO Open Science Recommendation β Open Access Australasia β
Open Access Australasia 2022 Election Statement: Call for investment in open scholarly publishing system in Australia β Open Access Australasia β
Accelerating the paradigm shift towards Open Science and Data Sharing in Pandemic times and beyond β Open Access Australasia β
Draft Copyright Reform Legislation: submission from Open Access Australasia β Open Access Australasia β
Openness, Integrity, Inclusion, and Innovation in Scholarly Communication: Competing or Complementary Forces? β Open Access Australasia β
Kicking off OA advocacy in 2022: Resources for OA advocates to use and adapt β Open Access Australasia β
Open Access Australasia Submission to Australia National Research Infrastructure Roadmap Exposure Draft, December 2021 β Open Access Australasia β
Bibliodiversity, not commercial predominance, should be the future of open access β Open Access Australasia β