Protests, Petitions and Publishing: Widening Access to Research in 2012

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 research interests include kinship and identity, 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 and author of the blog “Not Even Wrong.”

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."

Columbia Libraries Responds to White House OSTP

The Columbia University Libraries/Information Services (CUL/IS) has responded to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy's (OSTP) requests for information (RFI) on public access to scientific publications and data resulting from federally funded research.

Columbia is one of many universities and other groups representing researchers and research institutions that have submitted responses to the RFIs. Many publishers of scholarly journals are also expected to comment.

Read the CUL/IS response to the publications RFI and its response to the data RFI.

Answering these RFIs has been especially crucial in light of the recent introduction of the Research Works Act (RWA) in the House of Representatives. The RWA (HR 3699, co-sponsored by Congressman Darrell Issa and New York Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney), would prevent Federal agencies from adopting policies requiring that peer-reviewed journal articles reporting the results of Federally funded research be made publicly accessible without the prior consent of both the author and publisher of the article. The RWA would mean the end of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Public Access Policy and would prohibit other Federal agencies from adopting similar policies. The bill has been broadly criticized by researchers, librarians, and advocates of open access, open government, and open source software. Though the Association for American Publishers supports the bill, AAP members including MIT Press, ITHAKA, and Pennsylvania State University Press have denounced it.

Answers to Your Questions About Copyright and Electronic Filing

Tuesday, March 6, 1:00 to 2:30 PM
Butler Library, Room 523
 

Ask your questions about copyright, using copyrighted materials in your dissertation or thesis, and depositing your work in Academic Commons. Copyright Advisory Office director Kenneth Crews and Academic Commons manager Robert Hilliker will offer advice to Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) students preparing their dissertations or theses for electronic filing. Bring specific questions!

Though the focus of this discussion will be on GSAS dissertations, all members of the Columbia community are welcome.

Answers to Your Questions About Copyright and Electronic Filing

Wednesday, February 8, 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM
Butler Library, Room 523
 

Ask your questions about copyright, using copyrighted materials in your dissertation or thesis, and depositing your work in Academic Commons. Copyright Advisory Office director Kenneth Crews and Academic Commons manager Robert Hilliker will offer advice to Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) students preparing their dissertations or theses for electronic filing. Bring specific questions!

Though the focus of this discussion will be on GSAS dissertations, all members of the Columbia community are welcome.

New Video: “Harnessing the Semantic Web for Scholarship”

Watch three great presentations on the Semantic Web in the video of our November 2 Research Without Borders event "Harnessing the Semantic Web For Scholarship." Benno Blumenthal, Data Library Manager at the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI), offers an introduction to semantic technologies, using the IRI Data Library as an example. Cristina Pattuelli of the Pratt School of Information and Library Science outlines how she is using semantic technologies to work with cultural heritage collections. And Fordham University assistant professor Micki McGee describes her work with semantic technologies on the Yaddo Circles Project and the Compatible Data Initiative.

The speakers illuminate the potential of the Semantic Web as a productive tool for scholarship and research while illustrating how semantic technologies are still in the beginning stages of development.

Check out this and other videos of events on the Past Events page.

Open Access Policy Template Now Available

If your department or school is considering adopting an open access policy, visit the Open Access Policy Template page. You can now download the policy language that both the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and the Columbia Libraries/Information Services use for their open access policies. This language can be applied to any unit of Columbia University and can be adopted for use at other institutions.

Along with the template, on this page you will find links to:

  • frequently asked questions about the policy and about open access;
  • information about open access policies at peer institutions;
  • related resources.

And if your Columbia department or school approves an open access policy, be sure to let us know! The Libraries/Information Services will support implementation of your policy and help make complying with the policy easy for faculty and staff. We will also introduce you to Columbia's digital repository, Academic Commons, and the services it provides to scholars and researchers at Columbia.

Open Access Week 2011

The week of October 24, events marking the growth of open access as a new norm of scholarship and research will take place at Columbia and on campuses all over the globe. Now in its fifth year, Open Access Week is an opportunity to learn about open access developments at Columbia and other institutions, and to participate in the continuing conversation about best practices in scholarly communication.

Columbia Events

Your Dissertation: What You Need to Know About Copyright and Electronic Filing

October 26 at noon
Alfred Lerner Hall Room 555

For Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) students, but open to all Columbia students. Find out how to make filing your dissertation a breeze. Learn about copyright issues and the opportunities presented by depositing your dissertation in Columbia's digital repository. View details

Beyond the Copyright Wars: Fair Use, Free Speech, and Reframing the Policy Debate

October 27 at 2:00 PM
Journalism 607B

American University Professor Patricia Aufderheide discusses her new book with Peter Jaszi, Reclaiming Fair Use: How to Put Balance Back in Copyright. View details

Introduction to New Digital Humanities Center & Academic Commons Deposit Party

Thursday, October 27 from 3:30 to 5:00 PM
Digital Humanities Center, Butler Library Room 305

Graduate students can check out the revamped Digital Humanities Center and bring USB drives with materials to deposit into Academic Commons, Columbia's open access digital repository. Refreshments will be served. 

Open Access Library Cordial & Academic Commons Deposit Party

October 27 at 5:00 PM
Monell Engineering Library

Chat with colleagues, learn about open access, and bring your work on a USB drive to upload to Academic Commons. View details

Learn More

Expert panel to discuss data management and federal funding

On Tuesday, September 27 at noon, the Scholarly Communication Program will host a panel discussion on "Data Management and Federal Funding: What Researchers Need to Know." Co-sponsored with Columbia's Office of Research Compliance and Training, this event will examine the goals of funder data-management policies and explore the technical, scientific, and professional challenges resulting from efforts to preserve and share data.

The speakers all have extensive experience with data management issues and we look forward to an informative discussion. The panel includes: Victoria Stodden, Assistant Professor of Statistics at Columbia University and a member of the NSF's Advisory Committee for Cyberinfrastructure; Sayeed Choudhury, Associate Dean for Library Digital Programs, Hodson Director of the Digital Research and Curation Center at the Sheridan Libraries of Johns Hopkins University, and Principal Investigator of the NSF-funded Data Conservancy; and Kerstin Lehnert, Senior Research Scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and co-Principal Investigator for the NSF-funded Integrated Earth Data Applications data facility.

Anyone interested in these issues is welcome to attend this first Research Without Borders event for the 2011-12 academic year. It will be held on Columbia's Morningside campus in Faculty House, Presidential Rooms 2 & 3.

You can also follow a live summary of the discussion at http://twitter.com/ScholarlyComm. If you would like to presubmit questions for the speakers, please email them to kp2002 [at] columbia.edu or send a direct message on Twitter to @scholarlycomm by the end of the day on Friday, September 23.

Data Management and Federal Funding: What Researchers Need to Know

Research Without Borders
September 27, 2011

New requirements from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and other federal agencies have brought data management and sharing into the spotlight. This trend will continue as more research sponsors, and the general public, demand increased access to federally-funded research data. This event examines the goals of these requirements and explore the technical, scientific, and professional challenges resulting from efforts to preserve and share data.

Speakers:

Sayeed Choudhury, Associate Dean for Library Digital Programs, Hodson Director of the Digital Research and Curation Center at the Sheridan Libraries of Johns Hopkins University

Victoria Stodden, Assistant Professor of Statistics at Columbia University 

Kerstin Lehnert, Senior Research Scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory 

This event was co-sponsored by the Office of Research Compliance and Training.

Watch the new “Crisis on Campus” highlights video

How do we best educate students for an increasingly networked and global future? Columbia Department of Religion chair Mark C. Taylor joined the debates over education reform with opinion pieces in the New York Times and the 2010 book Crisis on Campus. You can now view highlights from Taylor's November 2010 Research Without Borders talk at Columbia outlining his thoughts on re-imagining post-secondary education. The structure of the university and its curriculum reflects the needs of the industrial age, argues Taylor, and in the era of global networked culture this is not a sustainable financial, institutional, or curricular model. Taylor's ideas for change inform the continuing conversation around the future of education and networked technology.

You can view the complete video of Taylor's talk on the Past Events page. View highlights of Taylor's talk and other Research Without Borders events on YouTube.