ALT A screenshot from an informative video by ORCID available within the blog post. It is a diagram showing the ORCID iD at the center with arrows pointing to six entities: Research Organizations, Publishers, Repositories, Professional Associations, Universities, and Funders. A woman stands to the right, smiling.
Looking forward to hosting a meeting of the @RL_UK Open Strategy Network in Liverpool today! Tune in later to see the crucial question that @OsMonkey and I are going to ask our members 🤔
Confess I haven’t even read them all myself…Chris & Dorka generated too many of the damn things 😀
Useful preliminary analysis here leedsunilibrary.wordpress.co…
Currently thinking about comms, repackaged a few in this resource alt-6100e9398f586.blackboard…
(Grateful for any feedback)
They’re a bit more ‘warts and all’ than ukrn…hence disclaimer:
These case studies do not necessarily represent 'best practice', rather they reflect the experiences of practitioners in a real world context.
Thanks Emily, it’s a great resource that I’ve referred to many times. Look forward to the new primer :)
We’ve been collecting case studies at UoL (thanks to @dorkatamas and @cjcox991)
leedsunilibrary.wordpress.co…
V grateful to @UKRN for making our "Open Research across disciplines" work more accessible. Note the pdf version (osf.io/3r8hb/) of the this also has methodology categories, Qual research being one. We are also writing a primer on Open Qual Research. Watch this space!
An oversight that I’ll get updated (UoL OR statement does acknowledge:
In recognition that not all outputs can be made openly available for ethical, legal, or commercial reasons, we adhere to the principle that all research should be “as open as possible, as closed as necessary”
The Analysis and Policy Observatory archived a copy when we discovered the same problem a couple of years ago apo.org.au/node/36452 it is truly shocking that such an influential document has just been allowed to disappear.