2 presentations:Connecting Global Agricultural Research: FAO AGRIS as a FAIR and Digital Public Good InfrastructureMaidelyn Diaz Perez, Tiziano Di Condina, Alicia García García, Jaime García Llopis, Jose Hernández Meléndez, Tiziano Lorenzetti, Irena Mnatsakanyan, Mercy Moyo, Onan Mulumba, Chelsey Scalese, Imma Subirats-CollFood and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, ItalyFAO AGRIS is a global, FAIR-compliant information system that aggregates and disseminates agricultural research from over 2,000 institutions worldwide, with strong participation from the Global South. Contributing organizations provide standardized metadata, while full texts remain hosted on local or external platforms, accessed through persistent links. Many institutions, particularly in resource-constrained settings, lack the capacity to maintain institutional repositories, leaving their research poorly indexed or invisible globally. FAO AGRIS addresses this gap by decoupling global discoverability from local infrastructure. Institutions can submit metadata through lightweight workflows, which FAO AGRIS curates and enriches with AGROVOC to enable global discovery. FAO AGRIS functions as shared infrastructure for metadata standardization and interoperability, increasing visibility, supporting FAIR access, and enabling research reuse, policymaking, and Sustainable Development Goal monitoring.Operationalizing FAIR in National Research Information Systems: The BrCris Example and Its Role in Open RepositoriesWashington Luís Ribeiro de Carvalho Segundo (1), Thiago Magela Dias (2), Marcel Garcia Souza (1), Fábio Lorensi do Canto (3), Priscila Machado Sena (1)(1) Brazilian Institute of Information in Science and Technology (IBICT), Brazil; (2) Federal Center for Technological Education of Minas Gerais (CEFET-MG), Brazil; (3) Federal University of Santa Catarina (UFSC), BrazilThe adoption of the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) has become a cornerstone of Open Science, guiding practices aimed at improving the quality, transparency, and reuse of scientific data. In the context of CRIS (Current Research Information Systems), these principles play a strategic role in supporting the integration, standardization, and governance of scientific information on a national scale. This article analyzes the application of the FAIR principles within the Brazilian Scientific Research Information Ecosystem (BrCris), developed by the Brazilian Institute of Information in Science and Technology (Ibict), with the aim of discussing how its technical and organizational practices contribute to building a more reliable, interoperable, and reusable scientific data infrastructure. The methodology adopted is based on a literature review of the FAIR principles and a document analysis of technical reports, scientific articles, and institutional materials related to BrCris. The results indicate that BrCris shows significant progress in adopting the FAIR principles, especially in the use of persistent identifiers, semantic data integration, interoperability with international infrastructures, and the availability of data in open and reusable formats. It is concluded that BrCris constitutes a strategic infrastructure for the implementation of the FAIR principles in Brazil.
Imma et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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