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Friday Aug 31, 2007

Open Notebook Science and Malaria: Chemists Without Borders presentation

Chemists Without Borders is featuring a talk by Drexel University's Jean-Claude Bradley on Open Notebook Science and Malaria, Thursday, September 6, 2007 at 5pm British Summer Time (if you're as useless as me, look up the local time).

Jean-Claude Bradley is an Associate Professor of Chemistry and E-Learning Coordinator for the College of Arts and Sciences at Drexel University. He leads the UsefulChem project, an initiative started in the summer of 2005 to make the scientific process as transparent as possible by publishing all research work in real time to a collection of public blogs, wikis and other web pages. Contributors to UsefulChem include Chemistry Central Journal editorial board members Jeremy Frey and Mat Todd.

The term Open Notebook Science was coined by Bradley to distinguish this approach from other more restricted forms of Open Science. The main chemistry objective of the UsefulChem project is currently the synthesis and testing of novel anti-malarial agents. The cheminformatics component aims to interface as much of the research work as possible with autonomous agents to automate the scientific process in novel ways.

The event is free, to register visit the Chemists Without Borders website.

 

 

Tuesday Jul 10, 2007

A chance meeting spurs Green Chemistry initiatives in Africa

A recent article in Science (Subscription required) on collaborations between scientists in developed countries and African colleagues highlights how Green Chemistry has caught the imagination of Ethiopian chemists.

A chance meeting between Professor Martyn Poliakoff (Nottingham University) and Nigist Asfaw (Addis Ababa University) in 2003 has led to a fruitful collaboration and help in obtaining equipment. The work has allowed the groups to look at the use of plants indigenous to Ethiopia as a source of chemicals, and energy intensive drying processes can be carried out by utlising the sun - an abundant source at no cost.

The Royal Society of Chemistry, in 2006, launched its Archive for Africa with Dr Simon Campbell, RSC President, saying "We believe that free access to the RSC Archive will make a major contribution towards building scientific capacity." We believe so too.

It is clear that, if researchers in developing countries are to attract the attention of an international audience (that is considerably better funded and equipped) they must be given access to all of the research they require. What the RSC did was a major step forward for the continent, but it does not address the fact that other researchers around the world, even in relatively rich countries, often have no access to this content either.

Open access publications offer an excellent opportunity to level the playing field, allowing everyone who wants access to gain access. What is more, Chemistry Central and BioMed Central routinely waive the article processing charge associated with their publications for authors from countries in the low and lower-middle income listings of the World Bank.