Title: Making Knowledge Available
1Making Knowledge Available
- Professor Rune Nilsen
- Centre for International Health
- University of Bergen, Norway
2Public good
- Nature
- Research Knowledge
- Threatened by
- Competitive Capital and Market Forces
- Ignorance also among researchers
- Conservatism in the research communities
-
3Background
- Professor, Centre for International Health
(1988-) - Demand for publications and citations
- Partners in Africa and Asia
- Marginalized in the Global knowledge society
- Deputy Rector (VC)2000-2005)
- Evaluations--- Lack of citations and available
publication - Budget process revealed the dramatic situation
of journals - National initiative for Open Access, journals
and archives (OAI) - Parliament White paper
- Council for higher education
- The University Library- The Knowledge
Management unit of UiB - Director Nile Basin Research programme (2006-)
- for the 10 Nile state governments
410/90 Dilemma in health science
- The dilemma is the central problem in health
research. - Every year the world spends 50-60 billion for
health research and development. - Only 10 of this is used for research on the
health problems of 90 of the worlds people. - The 10/90 Report on Health Research, 1999
- Global Forum for Health Research
10/90 dilemma --A dilemma for all fields Social
sciences, arts, law, environment,
technology............. and access to knowledge
and research literature
5Nile Basin Research Program, April 2006
- 10 Countries around the Nile
- --Politics, history, climate, health,
technology-- - WB and all governments and regional universities
Norway - Dramatic situation level of water, droughts,
floods, food diseases, conflicts and war. - We found so many publications and theses piled
in a room of our library. How can we make it
available to the Nile challenges? And to the
research community? - Professor in the Nile region, 2006
- UiB will facilitate Open Archive Initiative
6Nile Basin Research programme, April 2006
- Difficult to get research knowledge Out
- The academic problems in developing countries
are not considered interesting by many journals - Theses not made available Rooms filled up
- The price of journals not affordable
- Conservatism towards the concepts of OA/OAI
---supported by Northern partners - Enthusiasm for the OAI initiative in NBRP
7- ..the results of most studies conducted in the
country lies in the bookshelves instead of being
utilized in solving the problems that were
addressed by those studies.. - ..the government.. has not given priority to the
utilization of research findings in its
development plans.. - Professor Kikula University of Dar Es Salaam1997
8- Research and higher learning are together the
motors in the Knowledge Revolution for Equity
and Development - Research and higher learning in a global
perspective will become the core of ordinary
research and higher learning institutions
Peril and Promise Task force for higher
education (World Bank 2000)
9RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS
- We are employed to research, and to make the
knowledge available and used by the global
research community, e.g for Research impact - We shall publish in Peer Review, quality
journals - 24000 peer-reviewed
- 2500000 art pr. Year
- We do not have access to the journals
- Example Ethiopian Journal of Health Development
- We publish for Research impact and not for
royalties.
10Knowledge management a core function of a
Research Universitysome observations
- The digital shift of paradigm for publications
- Often not fronted by Institutional academic
leadership. - Not pushed by the researchers and ..
- The libraries pushed, but had not mandate and
power - The Library system is the body for
- dynamic Knowledge management and
- keeping an institutional memory of knowledge
- Very few universities have a real and
prioritized - Knowledge management unit as an important part of
the institutional academic leadership
11Institutional memory of knowledge
- To visualize the institutional knowledge
- To enable access to the publications when access
to the databases of the journals no longer is
paid - To secure a culture among the researchers
through self archiving through the Institutional
Archive - If not active self archiving we can loose
access to our own institutions publications
12Open Access and Open Institutional
ArchivesStatus at University of Bergen
- Established and anchored in the University
strategy (2005-) - As a tool for better academic impact
- As a tool for Global Public Good
- The university library has the overall
responsibility - Has played the key role for Bergen Open Research
Archive - Manage the BORA and the parallel Thesis archive
- Some departments and Faculties implement the
concept - A few of the very best research groups are active
- Many researchers has not discovered BORA
- Many of the research leaders has not taken
ownership - Lack of Public Good perspective??
- Lack of understanding of the power of OA/OIA??
- ..
13Open Access and Open Institutional Archives
- Fundamental in reaching the RESEARCH GOALS
- Excellence
- Availability
- Academic impact
- Academic relevance
- Important to strengthen COMPETITIVENESS for the
research groups and in higher learning - A main tool to combat Scientific apartheid
- Ismail Serageldins,
- President Library in Alexandria
- World summit on sustainable development in
Johannesburg
14Making Knowledge Available
This workshop is timely set and important