I’ve put together a new research guide on Open Access resources. It is located under the Information Studies subject link on the LibGuide homepage. It includes general OA information, OA resources by discipline, and a number of Open Education Resources. Please let me know about any open access resources that I may have failed to include or may not be aware. Hopefully, the guide will grow to include a large number of open resources. You can access the guide here: http://guides.newman.baruch.cuny.edu/openaccess
Tag: Open Access
Trying to Find Standards and Codes
There is a great guest blog post by Carl Malamud at BoingBoing this week (“Liberating America’s Secret, For-Pay Laws”) about efforts to make standards and codes referred to in state and federal law freely available:
By making things like the National Fuel and Gas Code, the standard for safety in wood and metal ladders, or the standards for safety and hygiene in water supplies readily available to all without restriction, we make society better. People can read the standards and learn, they can improve upon them by making searchable databases or better navigational tools, they can build new kinds of businesses. Innovation and education are just two of the benefits of opening up this world, but at the root are basic issues of democracy and justice. We cannot tell citizens to obey laws that are only available for the rich to read. The current system acts as a poll tax on access to justice, a deliberate rationing and restriction of information critical to our public safety. That system is morally wrong and it is legally unconstitutional.
JSTOR early content
As you may have heard, JSTOR recently made its journal content published prior to 1923 in the United States and prior to 1870 elsewhere freely available to anyone. I have added these resources to our list of full-text journals so users can find this content if searching within Baruch.