Handout
- This page is part of the Harvard Open Access Project (HOAP).
- Sometimes HOAP needs a print handout, for example, to distribute at a Berkman Center Open House. Any good handout would include URLs, and any print handout with URLs ought to have an online counterpart with active links. Voilà! This wiki version of our latest handout is not pretty, and it doesn't tell you more than the rest of the HOAP web site, but it should make our print handouts more useful.
The Harvard Open Access Project (HOAP) works for the growth of open access to knowledge. It pursues this goal through consulting, community-building, research, and direct assistance.
Open access makes research easier to find, retrieve, use, and reuse, for professional researchers as well as teachers, students, journalists, non-profits, businesses, policy-makers, and individual curious minds. Open access maximizes the return on the public's enormous investment in research. Above all, open access accelerates the development of all the benefits that depend on research, from new medicines and useful technologies to informed decisions, solved problems, and effective public policies.
See the HOAP home page.
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/hoap/
1. HOAP fosters OA within Harvard by working closely with the Harvard Office for Scholarly Communication.
https://osc.hul.harvard.edu/
2. HOAP fosters OA beyond Harvard by consulting pro bono with universities, foundations, publishers, scholarly societies, governments, and other organizations considering OA policies. Since 2011, HOAP has consulted on OA policies and practices with three governments, 13 journals or publishers, 18 universities, and 23 other organizations or projects, on four continents (Africa, Asia, Europe, North America).
3. HOAP undertakes research and policy analysis on OA.
For example, HOAP maintains a widely-endorsed guide to good practices for university open-access policies...
http://bit.ly/goodoa
...and a series of guides to federal legislation supporting or opposing open access to federally-funded research. For example, see the HOAP guides on the Federal Research Public Access Act (FRPAA), Fair Access to Science and Technology Research Act (FASTR), and Research Works Act (RWA).
http://bit.ly/hoap-frpaa
http://bit.ly/hoap-fastr
http://bit.ly/hoap-rwa
4. Finally, HOAP provides OA to timely and accurate information about OA itself. HOAP makes frequent contributions to the Open Access Directory (OAD) and manages the comprehensive, global Open Access Tracking Project (OATP).
http://oad.simmons.edu
http://bit.ly/oatrackingproject
To support the OATP, HOAP also manages the development of TagTeam, an open-source social-tagging service optimized for crowd-based research projects.
http://bit.ly/tagteam-intro
You can help the cause by making your own work open access. If you're not sure how, see the short HOAP guide on this subject. If it doesn't answer your questions, contact us.
http://bit.ly/how-oa
HOAP is funded by Arcadia and based at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.
http://www.arcadiafund.org.uk/
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/
The HOAP team consists of Robert Darnton, William Fisher, Urs Gasser, Colin Maclay, Phil Malone, John Palfrey, Stuart Shieber, Peter Suber (Director), and Jonathan Zittrain.
Also see the online version of this handout with active links.
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/hoap/Handout