Open Access Anthropology

Promoting Open Access in Anthropology

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Entries from August 2009

The Impact of the Web 2.0 World on Scholarly Societies

August 15th, 2009 1 Comment

A friend who is very involved in the leadership of the American Folklore Society  just shared with me a link to James Lappin’s very effective blog post “The Impact of the Web 2.0 World on the Records Management Society.”  While presented as a case study of information science/archives organizations in the UK, its arguments generalize [...]

Tags: Case studies · Facebook · Links · Ning · Scholarly Societies · Twitter · Web 2.0 · Weblogs · YouTube · conferences · tools

UCP(-AAA)+JSTOR=?

August 14th, 2009 No Comments

I think that this is the week’s big news in scholarly communications issues.  Its not open access, but it is not-for-profit. There is much that could be said.  Hopefully there will be some discussion among anthropologists, especially in light of the AAA’s experiences working with the University of California Press Journals program.  For myself, I [...]

Tags: Announcements · Economic Issues · Ithaka/JSTOR · ProjectMuse · Scholarly Societies · University Presses

Scholarly Society-Library Partnerships Webcast Now Online

August 8th, 2009 No Comments

The video archive version of the recent Association for Research Libraries (ARL) webcast on “Reaching Out to Leaders of Scholarly Societies at Research Institutions” to which I contributed is now available online.  It can be gotten to for free, all that is required is signing in for ARL headcounting purposes.  Watching it in this way [...]

Tags: AAA OA Policy · Announcements · Case studies · Economic Issues · Events · OA Journals · Openness · Repositories · Scholarly Societies · conferences

EduPunk Repositories

August 6th, 2009 6 Comments

EduPunk, as I understand it, refers to scholars who, frustrated by the inferior tools offered by their universities, have embraced free online (i.e. “web 2.0″) social tools as a substitute. Much of the focus of EduPunk has been on teaching; for instance, using Google Groups instead of Blackboard. But I think Anthropologists should also think [...]

Tags: Mana'o project · Self-Archiving · tools