Chan et al. (2019). Contextualizing Openness: Situating Open Science
Leslie Chan, Angela Okune, Rebecca
Hillyer, Denisse Albornoz, and Alejandro Posada (eds.) (2019).
Contextualizing Openness: Situating Open Science. University of Ottawa
Press, IDRC. ISBN: 9780776626666, 352 pages. Open Access available at: https://www.idrc.ca/en/book/contextualizing-openness-situating-open-science
„Contextualizing Openness“ offers a fascinating look at Open
Science and the democratization of knowledge in international
development and social transformation with a focus on the Global South.
This volume presents contributions from the 12 projects that form the
Open and Collaborative Science in Development Network (OCSDNet)
organized around four central themes: Defining Open Science in
Development, Governing Open Science, Negotiating Open Science, and
Expanding Open Science for Social Transformation. The collective goal is
to illustrate how the opportunities and challenges associated with
openness vary across regions and, further, to identify the key
differences that characterize the actors, institutions, as well as the
infrastructure and governance of knowledge-based resources in highly
diverse settings.
To understand the movement toward Open Science and its impact on
the thinking and practices that drive development, we must challenge the
asymmetry of global knowledge production and of access to this
knowledge. Contextualizing Openness aims to stimulate further research
and debates about how to collectively design a knowledge system that is
open and equitable for all.
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