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NewsCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

We are pleased to present our 2019 annual report to the community. This year, we look back at our top stories from the 2019-2020 fiscal year while exploring what being open means to this project: open access, open source, open infrastructure. We also reflect on how our dedicated community has made, and keeps us, open.

NewsSlawCopyrightCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

I am working this year on developing a copyright amendment that is intended to do a much better job of supporting open access to research than the current law. This work is catching something of the tailwind filling the sails of open science, brought on by tragic, disruptive turns of the global pandemic.

NewsSlawCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

The global scale of the current pandemic has led to what feels like a remarkably unprecedented level of solidarity in a world pulling together (while standing apart) amid this common cause of fighting the spread of Covid-19. In the area in which I work (from home) of scholarly communication, publishers have been not only creating public access to Covid-19 collections of research and professional resources, from Elsevier’s COVID-19 Clinical

NewsPkpdocsCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

Over the past few months, PKP’s Documentation Interest Group (DIG) has been largely focused on two key areas: updates to documentation for Open Journal Systems (OJS) 3.2 and translation workflows. Our thanks to documentation sprinters and contributors for their ongoing work and support.

NewsCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

The Public Knowledge Project’s (PKP) 2020 Annual General Meeting (AGM) will be held Friday, July 24, 2020 from 12:00PM-1:00PM PDT. This is a free, online event open to everyone.    What does it mean to be open? Open infrastructure? Open source? Join the PKP team as we unpack what it means to us to be truly open. We’ll reflect back on the year gone by and share some exciting new plans for 2020-2021.

NewsNews For DevelopersCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

It’s time to upgrade! PKP is pleased to announce the release of OJS, OMP, and OPS 3.2.1. With this release, Open Preprint Systems (OPS) is officially out of beta, joining Open Journal Systems (OJS) and Open Monograph Press (OMP) in our regular release and support cycle.  Since the release of OJS/OMP/OPS 3.2 in February 2020, our development team has been busy tackling several small fixes to frequently encountered problems.

NewsCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

As post-secondary instructors adapt to providing online instruction for the foreseeable future, many are looking for new ways to engage with students in an online environment. Course journal projects, using Open Journal Systems (OJS), can offer one such opportunity. Course journal projects are an example of open pedagogy: open educational practices that involve students as producers, rather than just consumers, of knowledge.

NewsAccessibilityCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

In celebration of Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD), PKP’s newly formed Accessibility Interest Group shares an update on what PKP is doing to improve the accessibility of Open Journal Systems – and what authors, editors and publishers need to know to do their part as well. The PKP Accessibility Interest Group (AIG) held its first meeting on March 17, 2020.

NewsOPSRoad To PreprintsCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

In our third and final post in our “Road to Preprints” series, we’re chatting with PKP Associate Director of Research Juan Pablo Alperin to learn more about the Preprint Uptake and Use Project, a joint research initiative between ASAPBIo and the ScholCommLab that turned disappointing data into a metadata mission.

EmploymentNewsCiencias SocialesInglés
Publicado
Autor Alejandra Casas Niño de Rivera

Earlier this year, PKP Managing Director Kevin Stranack moved to Prince George, British Columbia, Canada – 770km due north of PKP’s administrative home at Simon Fraser University (SFU) Library in Burnaby (near Vancouver). While he’s leaving behind some big shoes to fill, we’re thrilled to report he’s not leaving PKP altogether. Here, from Kevin, is the scoop.