Harvard Open Access Project (HOAP)
Contents |
Goals
HOAP launched in 2011 to foster OA within Harvard, foster OA beyondHarvard, undertake research and policy analysis on OA, and provide OA to
timely and accurate information about OA itself.
Policy consultations
HOAP is available to consult with universities, funding agencies,publishers, scholarly societies, and other institutions developing OA
policies. These confidential pro bono consultations can assist
with policy language, strategy, and frequently heard questions,
objections, and misunderstandings. If you're interested, please contact Peter Suber.
Project pages
- How to make your own work open access
- Knowledge Unbound, Peter Suber, MIT Press, 2016.
- Open Access (the book), Peter Suber, MIT Press, 2012.
- Open Access Tracking Project
- Open Access Tracking Project (OATP), project home page
- Project FAQ
- Project tags
- Project conventions
- Project feeds
- Project mashups
- Project future
- Open Access Tracking Project (OATP), project home page
- Reference pages on US federal OA legislation
- Societies and Open Access Research (SOAR)
- TagTeam pages
Campus partners
- Harvard Open-Access Publishing Equity fund (HOPE fund)
Off-campus partners
- Creative Commons (CC)
- Open Access Directory (OAD)
- Open Access Tracking Project (OATP)
Project principals
- Robert Darnton
- William Fisher
- Urs Gasser
- Sue Kriegsman
- Colin Maclay
- Phil Malone
- John Palfrey
- Stuart Shieber
- Peter Suber, Director
- Jonathan Zittrain
Project coordinators at the Berkman Center
Research assistants
- Active
Updates
Some of HOAP's work is confidential, for example, consulting withinstitutions about their OA policies. For the rest of our work, see our
periodic public updates.
About
- Suggested short URL for this page = bit.ly/hoap-home
- Also see the Berkman Center HOAP page.
- The entire HOAP web site is periodically captured for preservation by the Harvard University Web Archive Collection Service (WAX).
Harvard Open Access Project
No comments:
Post a Comment