- EAN13
- 9782803106677
- Éditeur
- Académie royale de Belgique
- Date de publication
- 11/03/2019
- Collection
- L'Académie en poche
- Langue
- anglais
- Fiches UNIMARC
- S'identifier
Open Science, the challenge of transparency
Bernard Rentier
Académie royale de Belgique
L'Académie en poche
Livre numérique
-
Aide EAN13 : 9782803106677
- Fichier EPUB, libre d'utilisation
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A new way of conceiving scientific research, Open Science, was born with the
computer revolution. In the wake of Open Access (free public access to the
results of publicly funded research), it accompanies the great ideal of
transparency that is now invading all spheres of life in society. This book
describes its origins, perspectives and objectives. It also reveals the
obstacles and barriers due to private profit and academic conservatism.
Bernard Rentier is a Belgian virologist, associate member of the Royal Academy
of Sciences, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium, in the «Technology and Society»
class. He is First Vice-President of the Belgian Federal Council of Science
Policy.
After an international career as a researcher, he became Vice-rector
(1997-2005) and then Rector of the University of Liège (2005-2014).
He has established an institutional repository for scientific publications
with a mandate that has become a famed Open Access model and he is currently
working to promote Open Science in all its implications for research and
researchers.
computer revolution. In the wake of Open Access (free public access to the
results of publicly funded research), it accompanies the great ideal of
transparency that is now invading all spheres of life in society. This book
describes its origins, perspectives and objectives. It also reveals the
obstacles and barriers due to private profit and academic conservatism.
Bernard Rentier is a Belgian virologist, associate member of the Royal Academy
of Sciences, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium, in the «Technology and Society»
class. He is First Vice-President of the Belgian Federal Council of Science
Policy.
After an international career as a researcher, he became Vice-rector
(1997-2005) and then Rector of the University of Liège (2005-2014).
He has established an institutional repository for scientific publications
with a mandate that has become a famed Open Access model and he is currently
working to promote Open Science in all its implications for research and
researchers.
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