International Development - A closer look at DfID’s open access to research policy

abernard102@gmail.com 2012-08-18

Summary:

The U.K. Department for International Development is among the latest aid groups to open up more of its research to the public.  The department introduced an open data policy last month, as Devex reported. It takes effect Nov. 1 and will cover all new research programs that DfID will fund in full from the said date. Outputs expected to be available online under the policy include reports, journal articles, books and book chapters, audio and video files, images, data sets, websites and computer software. The policy is a formalization of DfID’s push to make the research studies it funds more accessible to those who could benefit from it most.   These include nongovernmental organizations, government officials and practitioners who don’t typically have access to expansive libraries the way most academics or research institutions do.  DfID has steadily increased its research budget over the years. It allocated 221 million British pounds ($346.5 million) for research in 2011-2012, up from 203 million pounds for 2010-11 and 177 million pounds for 2009-10. In 2008-09, the department spent 12 million pounds on research.  Some 28 percent of the research budget is set aside as core funding for research institutions such as the Consultative Group on International Agriculture Research, while 18 percent is invested in product development partnership like the Medicines for Malaria Venture and the Global Alliance for Livestock Veterinary Medicines. Other channels of DfID research spending include funding for research consortia, direct funding to specific organizations, research councils and collaborations with other U.K. government agencies and fellow donors.  As for sectors, DfID typically funds studies on human development (roughly 33 percent), agriculture (29 percent), global statistics (10 percent), climate and environment (8 percent), governance, conflict and social development (6 percent), and growth (3 percent). DfID’s research portfolio also covers impact evaluations, research uptake, systematic reviews, policy research and evaluation...  The open access policy, Devex has learned, enjoyed overwhelming support within DfID — but the department does recognize concerns around plagiarism, intellectual property violations and the prospect of some of the work being criticized by the public. The agency has promised to protect intellectual property rights and design outputs in a way that would require minimal data download.  All DfID partners who will be covered by the policy will have to complete a plan outlining opportunities to maximize the use of their research outputs and any associated cost. The plan will be part of requirements DfID will ask for and asses during the tender process for research grants... DfID’s new policy broadly aligns with open access policies recently introduced by the Wellcome Trust and Research Councils U.K., both of whom fund some development research...”

Link:

http://www.devex.com/en/blogs/49/blogs_entries/78931?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.data oa.comment oa.mandates oa.copyright oa.south oa.uk oa.patents oa.funders oa.wellcome oa.lay oa.dfid oa.rcuk oa.privacy oa.plagiarism oa.third_sector oa.government oa.policies

Date tagged:

08/18/2012, 08:40

Date published:

08/18/2012, 04:40