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Making the innovation case in Open Access scholarly communication
<!--HTML-->It seems almost unnecessary to have to elaborate additional reasons for the adoption of Open Access scholarly communication (OA sc) as manifested through Open Access journals and self-archiving practices. To those active within the OA arena, the case has been convincingly made, and...
Autor principal: | |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2005
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1552884 |
Sumario: | <!--HTML-->It seems almost unnecessary to have to elaborate additional reasons for the adoption
of Open Access scholarly communication (OA sc) as manifested through Open Access
journals and self-archiving practices. To those active within the OA arena, the case
has been convincingly made, and current arguments merely need to be disseminated
beyond the Library and Information Science (LIS) sphere. However, it is my contention
that a convincing argument for OA sc needs to be launched from the Science Policy
perspective if any government mandated pro-OA policy changes are to be effected. This
paper, then, is an attempt at taking the OA discussion beyond the LIS arena and into
the realm of Science and Innovation Policy. Using Innovation Theory as its
theoretical framework, it is argued that Open Access scholarly communication can only
serve to bolster Innovation Systems, be they national, regional, or sectoral. The
case of South Africa is taken as an illustrative example, though the case can and
will be generalised to beyond the South African science system. Making the case for
OA within the context of Innovation is also of strategic import, since government
policymakers frequently heed the advice of Science- and Innovation Policy researchers. |
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