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Open Access and the humanities: contexts, controversies and the future

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 17:11 authored by Martin Eve
<p>Open Access, the notion that research work should be free to access and re-use, is a theoretically simple concept that has become mired in practical complexities and controversies. It is also, however, an aspect of contemporary research practice that is gaining worldwide traction and one that no contemporary scholar can afford to ignore, regardless of his or her discipline. In this talk, Dr. Martin Eve will set out the background to open access, the specific challenges faced by the humanities and the potential future solutions. What, exactly, do the terms “gold”, “green”, “libre” and “gratis” mean? How can OA be affordable for the humanities? What are the political motivations for its implementation? What is open licensing? And will open access really happen?</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Engineering (Research Outputs)

Date Submitted

2014-10-08

Date Accepted

2014-10-08

Date of First Publication

2014-10-08

Date of Final Publication

2014-10-08

Event Name

Five Colleges Digital Humanities seminar

Event Dates

3rd October 2014

ePrints ID

15313

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