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Columbia Univ Scholarly Communication Program 2/28

  • Just saw this (below) — anyone planning to go? I have a meeting at the same time but am trying to figure out a way to attend. The anthropology angle is particularly fascinating to me: a few weeks ago the AAA (whose journals are published by Wiley) came out with a statement in support of RWA, then backpedaled (in a very muddled way) in response to member outcry.

    If I don’t make it, I would love to hear a recap from anyone who goes. Thanks!

    Columbia University Libraries/ Information Services News

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Contact: Leyla Williams, 212-851-7338, lwilliams@columbia.edu
    Panel to Consider Recent Developments in Access to Research
    How can access to important research and scholarship be available to all, not just “the one percent”? On Tuesday, February 28, at 12:00 PM in Columbia University’s Faculty House Presidential Rooms 2 & 3, join us for “Protests, Petitions and Publishing: Widening Access to Research in 2012” to discuss how Occupy Wall Street, the Research Works Act (RWA), the boycott of Elsevier journals by a growing number of academics, and other recent developments are informing the debate over access to research and scholarship. The event is free and open to the public.
    The Occupy movement resonated widely on college campuses in America and around the world when it began in Fall 2011 and reinvigorated discussion of socioeconomic inequality and increasing costs associated with higher education. Current debates about scholarly publishing have further echoed these themes. Two bills-the RWA, which seeks to end public-access policies to federally funded research, and the Federal Research Public Access Act, which seeks to expand the reach of these policies-are currently under consideration in Congress. In response, over 6,000 scholars have signed an online petition boycotting the scholarly journals published by the commercial publisher Elsevier, one of the major financial supporters of the sponsors of the RWA. Meanwhile, several societies have begun to address their membership’s concerns about publishing practices that may be seen to exclude scholars at all but the most wealthy institutions. Are scholars and publishers finally ready to change the process by which scholarship is distributed?

    The speakers bring a variety of perspectives to the issue of access to research.

    Allan Adler is Vice President for Legal and Governmental Affairs in the Washington, D.C., headquarters of the Association of American Publishers (AAP), where he deals with intellectual property, freedom of speech, new technology, and other industry-related issues.

    Gail Drakes is a doctoral candidate in the Program in American Studies at New York University and Associate Faculty at NYU’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study. Her current teaching and research interests explore the ways in which copyright (and other forms of private ownership of information) serve to regulate access to the stories, sounds, and images that shape collective scholarly and public understandings of the past.

    Alex Golub is assistant professor of Anthropology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. His general research interests include kinship and identity, World of Warcraft and the Internet, resource development, and political anthropology. He is a founder of the popular cultural anthropology blog “Savage Minds.”

    Oona Schmid is the Director of Publishing at the American Anthropological Association. She is responsible for the daily oversight and long-term planning around a complex publishing program that includes more than 20 specialized anthropological journals.

    Peter Woit is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Mathematics at Columbia University. Since 2004 he has written on physics and mathematics topics for his blog “Not Even Wrong.” His current research is on quantum field theory and automorphic representations.

    This is Columbia University’s Scholarly Communication Program’s third event this academic year in their speaker series, Research Without Borders: The Changing World of Scholarly Communication. Follow the series remotely via Twitter at http://twitter.com/ScholarlyComm. For information about Research Without Borders, please email Kathryn Pope at kp2002@columbia.edu, or visit http://scholcomm.columbia.edu/events.

    The Scholarly Communication Program (SCP) explores innovative models for sharing new knowledge. The Program, based at the Center for Digital Research and Scholarship (CDRS) within Columbia University Libraries/Information Services, hosts events and maintains a website to educate the Columbia community about changes taking place within the scholarly communication system. Services provided by the SCP and its sister programs support promising new modes of scholarly exchange.

    Columbia University Libraries/Information Services is one of the top five academic research library systems in North America. The collections include over 11 million volumes, over 150,000 journals and serials, as well as extensive electronic resources, manuscripts, rare books, microforms, maps, and graphic and audio-visual materials. The services and collections are organized into 22 libraries and various academic technology centers. The Libraries employs more than 500 professional and support staff. The website of the Libraries is the gateway to its services and resources: library.columbia.edu.

    To view online, please visit: http://library.columbia.edu/news/libraries/2012/20120216_access_to_research_panel.html

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