Scholarly
Another unlikely library -- this one made from books salvaged from the garbage of Ankara. The post The Trash Library of Ankara appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Karin Wulf and Rick Anderson reflect on the OSTP's response to their interview questions, and on some implications of those responses and of the memo itself. The post Thoughts and Observations on the OSTP Responses to Our Interview Questions appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
To mark the first unofficial Publishing Ethics Week, Allegra Martschenko and Rachael Levay discuss the importance of responsible, ethical mentorship. The post Publishing Ethics Week – The Many Paths of Mentorship: Redefining Ethical Relationships appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Karin Wulf and Rick Anderson interview Dr. Alondra Nelson, acting director of the White House Office on Science & Technology Policy when the new OSTP memo was published. The post New Light on the New OSTP Memo: An Interview with Dr. Alondra Nelson appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
On Indigenous Peoples' Day we revisit an interview with Dr. Katharina Ruckstuhl, on how we can ensure that our research infrastructure supports and respects Indigenous knowledge and knowledge management. The post Revisiting — Indigenous Knowledge and Research Infrastructure: An Interview with Katharina Ruckstuhl appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Visualizing the world at different scales, with some physics of what your experience at tiny sizes might be like. The post The Size of Things: Now with Physics! appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
A new type of post from us today, offering a smorgasbord of opinions on topics including the ongoing Twitter/Elon Musk saga, just what "equitable access" to the literature means, the ongoing lack of experimental controls in one area of bibliometric analysis, and whether journals are more like a gate or a sewer. The post Smorgasbord:…
Today we announce another round of article translations, this time into Korean, Chinese, and Japanese. The post Expanding Scholarly Kitchen Translations Collections appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Robert Harington considers whether open and public access models, as they have emerged so far, are delivering us to a more inequitable publishing future as we rush towards openness. The post Equity, Inclusiveness, and Zero Embargo Public Access appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Karin Wulf and Rick Anderson provide a roundup of responses to the new OSTP public access memo -- and a preview of their interview with OSTP leadership. The post The New OSTP Memo: A Roundup of Reactions and an Interview Preview appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.