Reassembling Scholarly Communications: Histories, Infrastructures, and Global Politics of Open Access | MIT Press Open Access
flavoursofopenscience's bookmarks 2020-10-20
Summary:
Table of contents:
- Epistemic Alienation in African Scholarly Communications: Open Access as a Pharmakon – Thomas Hervé Mboa Nkoudou
- Scholarly Communications and Social Justice – Charlotte Roh, Harrison W. Inefuku, and Emily Drabinski
- Social Justice and Inclusivity: Drivers for the Dissemination of African Scholarship – Reggie Raju, Jill Claassen, Namhla Madini, and Tamzyn Suliaman
- Can Open Scholarly Practices Redress Epistemic Injustice? – Denisse Albornoz, Angela Okune, and Leslie Chan
- When the Law Advances Access to Learning: Locke and the Origins of Modern Copyright – John Willinsky
- How Does a Format Make a Public? – Robin de Mourat, Donato Ricci, and Bruno Latour
- Peer Review: Readers in the Making of Scholarly Knowledge – David Pontille and Didier Torny
- The Making of Empirical Knowledge: Recipes, Craft, and Scholarly Communication – Pamela H. Smith, Tianna Helena Uchacz, Naomi Rosenkranz, and Claire Conklin Sabel
- The Royal Society and the Noncommercial Circulation of Knowledge – Aileen Fyfe
- The Political Histories of UK Public Libraries and Access to Knowledge – Stuart Lawson
- Libraries and Their Publics in the United States – Maura A. Smale
- Open Access, “Publicity,” and Democratic Knowledge – John Holmwood
- Libraries, Museums, and Archives as Speculative Knowledge Infrastructure – Bethany Nowviskie
- Preserving the Past for the Future: Whose Past? Everyone’s Future – April M. Hathcock
- Is There a Text in These Data? The Digital Humanities and Preserving the Evidence – Dorothea Salo
- Accessing the Past, or Should Archives Provide Open Access? – István Rév
- Infrastructural Experiments and the Politics of Open Access – Jonathan Gray
- The Platformization of Open – Penny C. S. Andrews
- Reading Scholarship Digitally – Martin Paul Eve
- Toward Linked Open Data for Latin America – Arianna Becerril-García and Eduardo Aguado-López
- The Pasts, Presents, and Futures of SciELO – Abel L. Packer
- Not Self-Indulgence, but Self-Preservation: Open Access and the Ethics of Care – Eileen A. Joy
- Toward a Global Open-Access Scholarly Communications System: A Developing Region Perspective – Dominique Babini
- Learned Societies, Humanities Publishing, and Scholarly Communication
Link:
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