Open Access igår och idag : en rörelse i rörelse
(2022) ABMM54 20221Division of ALM, Digital Cultures and Publishing Studies
- Abstract
- In 2002 the Budapest Open Access Initiative was born, and shortly thereafter in 2003 the Bethesda Statement and the Berlin Declaration followed suit. These three initiatives are frequently viewed as the ground staples of the Open Access movement, and promoted free access to academic journals for everyone with an internet connection. These three initiatives has been studied in this essay, as well as the British Finch Report from 2012, OA2020 from 2018, and the latest big initiative, Plan S, which was implemented in 2021. The policy documents have been analysed with the help of Carol Bacchi’s WPR analysis, which asks the question “what’s the problem represented to be?”. The purpose of this essay is to try to understand what problems are... (More)
- In 2002 the Budapest Open Access Initiative was born, and shortly thereafter in 2003 the Bethesda Statement and the Berlin Declaration followed suit. These three initiatives are frequently viewed as the ground staples of the Open Access movement, and promoted free access to academic journals for everyone with an internet connection. These three initiatives has been studied in this essay, as well as the British Finch Report from 2012, OA2020 from 2018, and the latest big initiative, Plan S, which was implemented in 2021. The policy documents have been analysed with the help of Carol Bacchi’s WPR analysis, which asks the question “what’s the problem represented to be?”. The purpose of this essay is to try to understand what problems are constructed and how in the policys. The essay shines a light on how the Open Access movement and the discourse around it have developed over the last twenty years. It also identifies the problem of it claiming to be a global movement, while being built on Western ideas. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/9093652
- author
- Hedengren, Malin LU
- supervisor
-
- Olof Sundin LU
- organization
- course
- ABMM54 20221
- year
- 2022
- type
- H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
- subject
- keywords
- Library, Information, Open Access, Scientific Communication, Science, Policy, Scientific Publication
- language
- Swedish
- id
- 9093652
- date added to LUP
- 2022-08-23 08:54:40
- date last changed
- 2022-08-23 08:54:40
@misc{9093652, abstract = {{In 2002 the Budapest Open Access Initiative was born, and shortly thereafter in 2003 the Bethesda Statement and the Berlin Declaration followed suit. These three initiatives are frequently viewed as the ground staples of the Open Access movement, and promoted free access to academic journals for everyone with an internet connection. These three initiatives has been studied in this essay, as well as the British Finch Report from 2012, OA2020 from 2018, and the latest big initiative, Plan S, which was implemented in 2021. The policy documents have been analysed with the help of Carol Bacchi’s WPR analysis, which asks the question “what’s the problem represented to be?”. The purpose of this essay is to try to understand what problems are constructed and how in the policys. The essay shines a light on how the Open Access movement and the discourse around it have developed over the last twenty years. It also identifies the problem of it claiming to be a global movement, while being built on Western ideas.}}, author = {{Hedengren, Malin}}, language = {{swe}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{Open Access igår och idag : en rörelse i rörelse}}, year = {{2022}}, }