Budapest Open Access Initiative
The Budapest Open Access Initiative arises from a small but lively meeting convened in Budapest by the Open Society Institute (OSI) on December 1-2, 2001. The purpose of the meeting was to accelerate progress in the international effort to make research articles in all academic fields freely available on the internet. The participants represented many points of view, many academic disciplines, and many nations, and had experience with many of the ongoing initiatives that make up the open access movement. In Budapest they explored how the separate initiatives could work together to achieve broader, deeper, and faster success. They explored the most effective and affordable strategies for serving the interests of research, researchers, and the institutions and societies that support research. Finally, they explored how OSI and other foundations could use their resources most productively to aid the transition to open access and to make open-access publishing economically self-sustaining. The result is the Budapest Open Access Initiative. It is at once a statement of principle, a statement of strategy, and a statement of commitment.
Budapest Open Access Initiative fits in the following categories
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Role based resources
Closing the Digital Curation Gap
Closing the Digital Curation Gap
Data curation is often carried out by information practitioners with little training or experience. The Closing the Digital Curation Gap (CDCG) collaboration united those at the cutting edge of digital curation research, development, teaching and training with the aim of creating good practice guides covering all aspects of data curation.
