Within the context of Open Science, book publishing has traditionally lagged behind in the adoption of open access, open data and corresponding practices. Not-for-profit infrastructures including the Directory of Open Access Books (DOAB), the OAPEN Foundation, Open Book Collective (OBC), the Public Knowledge Project (PKP), and Thoth Open Metadata have joined forces to collaboratively develop open, community-led solutions to the many barriers faced by publishers when considering the creation, discovery, distribution, archiving and financing of open access (OA) books. Our presentation will showcase a variety of innovative open metadata management, hosting, and distribution solutions tailored to tackle the problems of getting OA works into the wider book supply chain. We will show how Thoth enables publishers to create rich, fully open data in industry-standard formats, incl. ONIX (2.1, 3.0, 3.1) MARC21 have their content and metadata hosted in internationally-recognised discovery solutions (including DOAB access privacy-respecting usage metrics across multiple platforms (via the OPERAS Metrics service, Thoth, and COKI); and in creating and managing collective funding channels for OA books via the Opening the Future programme and the Open Book Collective – two models supporting presses to transition away from a reliance on unsustainable author-facing fees (BPCs) through collective funding, with OBC also providing a means to financially sustain open infrastructure / service providers via voluntary contributions from supporting libraries. All in all, this close collaboration between like-minded infrastructures – and with some of them (OAPEN & PKP) having existed for more than a decade – constitutes a collective, open, equitable ecosystem of interoperable not-for-profit services and platforms that are jointly active in a variety of international networks and communities, including the Copim community, OPERAS, COMET, the Knowledge Equity Network (KEN), and the Barcelona Declaration group of supporters. Doing so, this dedicated group of infrastructures exemplifies a community- and values-led not-for-profit approach to supporting open access book publishing that is understood to live by the principle of 'Scaling Small' – a concept that "puts forward the idea that scale can be nurtured through intentional collaborations between community-driven projects that promote a bibliodiverse ecosystem while providing resilience through resource sharing and other kinds of collaboration" (Adema & Moore, 2021).
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
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Tobias Steiner
Juan Pablo Alperín
Joe Deville
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
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Steiner et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68d464ff31b076d99fa64ccc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.7557/5.8159