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BioMed Central Blog

Friday Jul 04, 2008

Open access and the developing world - read the latest

The International African Institute and Edinburgh University Press have announced that their journal Africa: Journal of the International African Institute will be now available free to libraries and non-profit research and educational institutions in some countries in Africa.

 

The ELPUB Open Scholarship Conference was held in Toronto at the end of June and the full texts of presentations are available online. Of particular interest is Subbiah Arunachalam’s presentation on India’s stance on open access, where he describes his own engagement with the Science Academies and key policymakers. In another presentation, Gideon Emcee Christian highlights the challenges to the establishment of open access institutional repositories in Nigeria. Isabel Galina and Joaquín Giménez presented an exploratory overview of the situation in Mexico, one of the leading countries in terms of scientific output in Latin America and how the open access movement has not yet permeated the academic
research environment.

 

Meanwhile, an article in Fortune discusses Bill Gates’ involvement in the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Since retiring from Microsoft, Gates is now even more engaged in his role as co-chair, where he will be responsible for much of the strategic thinking. An excerpt from the article reads:

‘And Gates is teeming with ideas, especially about things scientific. Unlike most benefactors, he doesn't merely want to eradicate malaria and AIDS; he wants to understand the nuances of immunology. He wants to learn about what happens on a molecular scale when a plant's genes are altered to improve hardiness.

 

Lastly, a new report entitled ‘Improving Access to Scientific Information for Developing Countries: UK Learned Societies and Journal Access Programmes’ has been issued by the Improving Access to Scientific Information Working Group of the UK National Commission for UNESCO Natural Sciences Committee. The report was undertaken in order to assess the participation of UK scientific learned societies in existing journal access programmes which provide free or low access to scholarly literature to developing countries. It is based on the results of a survey of 40 scientific learned societies in the UK, conducted between August and October 2007 suggests that wider participation in access programmes is crucial to make journals and other relevant content available to researchers in developing countries. An excerpt is provided:

‘...While the open access movement continues to gain positive ground in increasing access to research findings, most up-to-date scientific literature is at present still made accessible on a subscription-only basis. Strengthening scientific capacity in developing countries has therefore been greatly hampered by their inability to afford essential scientific literature due to the combined forces of the high cost of journal subscriptions, declining institutional budgets and currency weaknesses. In a survey conducted by the World Health Organization in 2000, researchers and academics in developing countries ranked access to subscription-based journals as one of their most pressing problems; in countries with annual incomes of US$1000 and less per person, 56% of institutions surveyed had no current subscriptions to international journals....

Based on the findings detailed in this report, and the conclusions drawn from these, the UK National Commission for UNESCO makes the following recommendations:

Participation by All Scientific Learned Societies and Organisations
...Journal access programmes for developing countries play a hugely important role in providing essential access to up-to-date scientific literature.

Those learned societies, and their third party publishers, which participate in these access programmes provide a highly commendable service for countries in need. Wider participation is urgently required to make journal and other relevant content, such as databases and reference books, available to institutions and readers in developing countries.’

 

Comments:

There is no doubt open access and improved information access is a must for the developing world. While we all endeavor to make this a reality to most scientists in the developing world, we also must ensure that the rest of the communities (non-scientists) have access to this information (in appropriate formats of course). Furthermore the possibilities of acting on such information must be available. Because, what is the point of having access to all the information if it does not result in improved well-being?

Posted by Adamson S. Muula on July 06, 2008 at 05:47 AM BST #

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