Open Licence Literacy: Given to Know, Give to Grow

Licensing spans areas of library work such as promoting open access, helping people navigate publication rights, advocating for open infrastructure, and the technological elements of research and learning.

When used well, open licences can underpin a lot of possibilities for finding, accessing, creating, and preserving scholarly work.

I’ve noticed however, that often people aren’t very confident in their knowledge of how open licence rights work. I think our (librarians and others) work in the realm of information literacy provides a useful approach to that problem. We need to improve understanding of information rights and restrictions in order to help people enculturate their own their practices with open scholarship.

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Talk about the Broad Value of Open Access

As a librarian, I talk with other faculty and students about their academic work and the life-cycle of the research process. I’ve always stressed that open access is important for many reasons, including toward making research outputs available to people that otherwise wouldn’t be able to get them. This post provides some background about the Concordia Library’s new interactive open access display, Seer. You can also learn about it in this video recorded for the Open for Climate Justice: An Across-Disciplines Fair at 4TH SPACE.

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