Source Details
Kuchma (2011)
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Title: |
Report on the implementation of open content licenses in developing and transition countries
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Author(s): |
Kuchma, I
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Year: |
2011
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Citation: |
Kuchma, I (2011). Report on the implementation of open content licenses in developing and transition countries.
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About the Data
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Cross Country Study?: |
No
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Comparative Study?: |
No
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Literature review?: |
No
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Government or policy study?: |
No
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Abstract
Open access is free of charge and free of most usage restrictions online access to research
literature. Open content licenses or some explicit statement attached to the article when it is
published in an open access journal or deposited in an open access repository help to refer to a
specific type of libre open access. These licenses / statements make it clear to the reusers what
they are permitted to do with published and deposited articles (including data). An
organization’s or journal’s licensing policy (including policy on re-use and redistribution) shall be clearly stated and visible on the web site. The survey attempted to gather information from a broad spectrum of research institutions in developing and transition countries in order to get a better understanding of the current state of the implementation of open content licenses. We looked at the web sites of 2,489 open access journals and 357 open access repositories from EIFL network countries. And this report highlights the best practices in using open content licenses by open access journals and open access repositories in developing and transition countries.
Main Results of the Study
Policy Implications as Stated By Author
Coverage of Study
Datasets