Global Science, Local Change
“The solutions are coming from the Africans themselves and from the developing world,” says Gracian Chimwaza. “They work locally to address the problems locally.”
“The solutions are coming from the Africans themselves and from the developing world,” says Gracian Chimwaza. “They work locally to address the problems locally.”
As Open Access and Open Science policies have taken hold, university librarians flung open the doors to their institutions. But in March 2020, those same libraries were forced to shut as the COVID-19 pandemic took hold.
A voyage around a page takes us on an engrossing metaphorical journey from the Sea of Syndication to the Lake of Knowledge, passing Woods of Truth and Scholarly Fields – forever, of course.
In the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, teachers and parents fear the COVID slide.
“We made the decision to pivot to digital over the summer and very quickly had to turn around an infrastructure that would support a digital meeting.”
Data-informed guidance on turning book pirates into book buyers.
“For research libraries, there is a strong need to champion the importance of digital preservation,” says Alicia Wise, recently appointed Executive Director of CLOCKSS.
Today, in a world of smartphones and tablets, publishing – as practiced by authors, publishers and booksellers – is all about licensing. The observation is a timely one on World Intellectual Property (IP) Day.
On Wednesday, March 31, at 11 a.m. Eastern time, CCC presents a special Town Hall program – “Solve for Success: The Transformative Power of Data Visualization.”
Across the European Union, fact-checkers, media literacy experts, and academic researchers are collaborating to fight online disinformation.