Scholarly Communication Program Speaker Series Videos Now Available Online

<http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/news/libraries/2009/2009-05-01.scholcomm.html>Scholarly
Communication Program Speaker Series Videos Now Available Online

(NEW YORK, May 1, 2009) Complete video of Research without Borders, the
‘08-’09 speaker series on hot topics in scholarly communication, is now available at http://scholcomm.columbia.edu/past-event…,
the website of Columbia University’s
Scholarly Communication Program.

The inaugural year of Research without Borders featured speakers at the forefront of the open access movement as well as experts in scholarly publishing, information policy, and copyright law. Harvard Professor Stuart Shieber kicked off the series in the fall semester, tracing
the development of Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ Open Access Policy. The second panel,
with Marian Hollingsworth from Thomson Reuters, Jevin West of Eigenfactor.org, and Johan Bollen of the MESUR project, debated the controversial Impact Factor, a metric of scholarly journals’ prominence.
Helen Tartar and Sanford Thatcher, leaders of Fordham and Penn State University Presses, respectively, joined Columbia Libraries’ Ree DeDonato for the third event,
which focused on the future of scholarly monographs.

The spring semester opened with a
discussion
on the benefits of open science with Bora Zivkovic of the Public Library of Science, Jean-Claude Bradley of Drexel University, and Barry Canton of OpenWetWare and Ginkgo BioWorks. In March, UCLA’s Christine Borgman, author of /Scholarship in the Digital Age/ (2007), spoke
to a packed room on information infrastructure and policy. The final event
explored the implications of copyright trends for research, featuring SPARC’s Heather Joseph, Michael Carroll of Washington Law School at American University, and Kenneth Crews of the Columbia University Copyright Advisory Office.

The Research Without Borders series will continue in the 2009-10 academic year with six new events on topics including scholarly blogging, open data, and open-access business models. Stay connected by following ScholarlyComm at http://twitter.com/ScholarlyComm, by joining the Scholarly Communication Program Facebook group, and through the iTunesU
page. For more information on the Program and the series, please email Kathryn Pope at  kp2002 at columbia.edu, or visit http://scholcomm.columbia.edu.

One Comment

  1. Posted May 7, 2009 at 2:52 am | Permalink

    Thanks for posting about our panel!

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