UAE firm launches OA tool to coincide with Open Access Week
A free scholarly search engine for browsing open access academic content has been launched to coincide with International Open Access Week
A free scholarly search engine for browsing open access academic content has been launched to coincide with International Open Access Week
Open science is important, but it is also hard. Unfortunately, 'hard' has often meant that scientific quality checks are both slow and inadequate, falling in an unsatisfactory middle ground between two opposing goals
Elsevier has announced the launch of Entellect, a new cloud-based data platform
Copyright Clearance Center has announced the release of RightFind Insight, a scientific research solution
Cambridge University Press is launching a content sharing service – Cambridge Core Share – aimed at providing the academic community and wider public with greater access to research.
The new service has been launched on the Cambridge Core platform and will extend the functionality to a select number of journals during an initial pilot phase.
Elsevier has announced that SSRN, its working paper repository and preprint server, has launched the Women’s and Gender Studies Research Network – WGSRN.
WGSRN launches with more than 4,000 working papers from 16 different areas of women’s and gender studies, ranging from Women and Health to Feminist Theory and Philosophy.
Preservica's active digital preservation platform is being trialled by 11 UK higher education (HE) institutions as part of Jisc’s Research Data Shared Service (RDSS) pilot project
Interviews for this article have been adapted from recent PhaidraCon roundtable events and from upcoming 2023 editions of EpistemiCast
Patrick Hargitt explains why 2022 became the year that accessibility got serious
Joseph Koivisto and Jordan Sly from the University of Maryland discuss the implications of the publications-as-data model
Despite the collective and decisive step changes in enabling the transition to open access this year, we should not be complacent, writes Susie Winter
Thomas Shaw and Andrew Barker from Lancaster University Library discuss the realities, challenges and future impact of open access in the research community
It’s not a question of if, but how. The future of scholarly publishing is open, yet the debate on how to accelerate the growth of open access continues