1 / 20

Daisy Ouya , OA consultant ICT in Education, Science and Culture Section

UNESCO Open Access Programme Objectives and Activities. eIFL General Assembly, Lund 6-8 August, 2010. Daisy Ouya , OA consultant ICT in Education, Science and Culture Section Communication and Information (CI) Sector UNESCO www.unesco.org/webworld/en/openaccess. Outline.

cullen
Download Presentation

Daisy Ouya , OA consultant ICT in Education, Science and Culture Section

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. UNESCO Open Access Programme Objectives and Activities eIFL General Assembly, Lund 6-8 August, 2010 Daisy Ouya, OA consultant ICT in Education, Science and Culture Section Communication and Information (CI) Sector UNESCO www.unesco.org/webworld/en/openaccess

  2. Outline • UNESCO Mission and the OA Programme • OA Programme objectives • Recent achievements • Near-term activities • Longer-term plans • Call for partnership

  3. A. Background UNESCO Building peace in the minds of people Mission: Building of Peace Alleviation of Poverty Sustainable Development Intercultural Dialogue

  4. Major Sectors • Education • Natural Sciences • Social and Human Sciences • Culture • Communication and Information

  5. B. UNESCO’s Open Access programme C&I Sector • Open Suite Strategy programmes • - OER • OTP • FOSS • Open Access (OA) • 3 Divisions • Freedom of Expression, Democracy and Peace • Communication Development • Information Society

  6. OA logo designed by PLoS

  7. Why OA? • Knowledge societies are informed societies • N-S disparity in information access and exchange

  8. OA Repositories Map (July 2010) http://maps.repository66.org/

  9. OA Programme objectives (For 2010 – 2011) • Publishers facilitate open access • Countries/institutions mandate open access Global Map of Open Access Initiatives and Stakeholders developed

  10. C. Recent achievements OA web page developed – live on 23 July 2010 www.unesco.org/webworld/en/openaccess

  11. D. Partners/advisors to the OA programme • eIFL • ICTP • OASIS • EPT • Individual OA experts

  12. E. Near-term activities 1. Regional OA workshop in Africa – planned for Oct/November 2010 – UNESCO/EIFL/ICTP Topics: • Open approaches to scholarship • OA benefits for researchers, research institutions, funders, countries • OA policies and mandates • Benefits of OA publishing and OA business models • Libraries and OA

  13. 1. Regional OA workshop in Africa – planned for Oct/November 2010 Target participants: • Regional policy institutes • National Science policy bodies • Universities • International Research NGOs • Journal editors/publishers

  14. 1. Regional OA workshop in Africa – planned for Oct/November 2010 Target countries: • Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Tanzania, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia

  15. E. Near-term activities 2. Berlin Conference, Beijing, Oct 2010

  16. E. Near-term activities 3. Mapping of OA initiatives worldwide Outputs: Publication and website

  17. F. Longer-term activities Major future focus likely to be • OA Advocacy • Capacity building • Support to IR development Policy makers, Librarians & Researchers are central to success. Will continue to work in partnership

  18. G. UNESCO strengths • Cross-cutting mission of peace building, poverty alleviation, sustainable development and intercultural dialogue • Global priorities: Africa and Gender equality • Global outreach:32 offices worldwide, including 15 in Africa

  19. G. Conclusion • UNESCO seeks to partner with active OA programmes, and contribute UNESCO’s unique strengths to advance Open Access to information

  20. Thank you www.unesco.org

More Related