17.370 Berlin Symposium on open access

From: Humanist Discussion Group (by way of Willard McCarty willard.mccarty@kcl.ac.uk)
Date: Sat Nov 01 2003 - 02:39:25 EST

  • Next message: Humanist Discussion Group (by way of Willard McCarty

                   Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 17, No. 370.
           Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
                       www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/humanist/
                            www.princeton.edu/humanist/
                         Submit to: humanist@princeton.edu

             Date: Sat, 01 Nov 2003 07:05:01 +0000
             From: <dgants@rogers.com>
             Subject: Berlin Symposium

    >
    > From: "Stefan Gradmann" <stefan.gradmann@rrz.uni-hamburg.de>
    > Date: 2003/10/31 Fri AM 03:03:31 EST
    > >
    > Dear Friends and Colleagues,
    >
    > following some messages exchanged on this forum from Stevan Harnad,
    myself &
    > some others a few day ago I thought that some of you might be interested in
    > knowing more about the source of all this - hence the following translation
    > of our press releason on the
    >
    > <press release>
    > Berlin Ad Hoc Symposium: Open Access ­ State of the Art and Perspectives in
    > the German Humanities & Social Sciences
    >
    > <executive version>
    > On 22nd of October an ad hoc symposium with the title “Two Roads to Open
    > Access ­ State of the Art and Perspectives in the German Humanities &
    Social
    > Sciences” was held at the Freie Universität in Berlin. As a result of this
    > event an initiative has been launched to investigate possible common
    > strategies and practice as well as common technical platforms in order to
    > foster Open Access principles in the German Humanities and Social Sciences.
    > </executive version>
    >
    > As a sequel to the “Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and
    Humanities”
    > conference that had been organized by the Max Planck Society and during
    > which representatives of major German and European science
    organizations had
    > signed the “Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Scientific Knowledge”
    > (http://www.zim.mpg.de/openaccess-berlin/berlin_declaration.pdf) the ad hoc
    > symposium more specifically dealt with the state of the art and
    perspectives
    > in the German humanities and social sciences.
    > The symposium was organized in order to create direct contact between the
    > hitherto less closely connected actors within Germany. FU Berlin
    > (http://www.fu-berlin.de) was hosting the meeting jointly with its own
    > e-journal "Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social
    > Research / Foro: Investigación Social Cualitativa" (FQS,
    > http://www.qualitative-research.net/fqs/fqs.htm), which is funded by the
    > Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, http://www.dfg.de). The event was
    > realized in co-operation with the project "German Academic Publishers"
    (GAP,
    > http://www.gap-c.de/ funded by DFG as well) and the “Informationszentrum
    > Sozialwissenschaften” (IZ, http://www.gesis.org/IZ/index.htm). 35
    > participants were representing several institutions from all over Germany.
    > The symposium started with a contribution from Stevan Harnad, one of the
    > initiators of the "Budapest Open Access Initiative"
    > (http://www.soros.org/openaccess/), who commented on some of the principles
    > of the ‘Open Access’ movement and further developed on the two roads
    leading
    > to the overall goals of this movement: electronic publication in freely
    > accessible journals and/or self-archiving of publications in toll-based
    > journals by the authors.
    > Following this contribution the state of the art and perspectives of Open
    > Access based platforms (journals and archives alike) in the German
    > humanities and social sciences were discussed with specific attention
    to the
    > following questions:
    > - What may be the specific (and possibly differing from the science
    > perspective) interest in Open Access based approaches in the humanities and
    > social sciences?
    > - How could the information streams among the humanities & social sciences
    > and the natural sciences as well as between the German and international
    > communities be made mode efficient and pertinent?
    > - How could we inform more efficiently and broadly the German
    humanities and
    > social science community about the benefits of Open Access as a
    conceptional
    > and practical framework?
    > The ad hoc symposium was a first, important step for making representatives
    > of German initiatives and projects in the humanities and social sciences,
    > libraries, funding bodies, learned societies and SME publishers talk to
    each
    > other.
    > Starting from this first exchange of ideas an initiative group has been
    > constituted among the initiators and participants with the aim of
    > investigating possible common strategies and practice as well as common
    > technical platforms in order to foster Open Access principles in the German
    > Humanities and Social Sciences.
    > Further information on the symposium and on future activities of the
    > initiative will be made available via the GAP portal site
    > (http://www.gap-c.de), discussion should continue using the open mailing
    > list GAP-forum accessible via the same site.
    >
    > Contacts:
    > FU Berlin: Jarg Bergold, bergold@zedat.fu-berlin.de
    > FQS: Katja Mruck, mruck@zedat.fu-berlin.de
    > GAP: Stefan Gradmann, stefan.gradmann@rrz.uni-hamburg.de
    > IZ Sozialwissenschaften: Max Stempfhuber, st@bonn.iz-soz.de
    > </press release>
    >
    > Kind regards & greetings from exceptionally dry and atmospherically
    pleasant
    > Hamburg -- Stefan Gradmann
    >
    > ************************************************************
    > Dr. Stefan Gradmann / Virtuelle Campusbibliothek
    > Regionales Rechenzentrum der Universität Hamburg
    > Schlüterstr. 70, D-20146 Hamburg
    > Tel.: +49 (0)40 42838 3093
    > Fax.: +49 (0)40 42838 3284
    > GSM : +49 (0)170 8352623
    > E-Mail: stefan.gradmann@rrz.uni-hamburg.de



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