Press Release January 1st
2012
INAUGURAL EPT AWARD for
OPEN ACCESS
The Electronic Publishing
Trust for Development is pleased to announce the winners of a new annual award
to be made to individuals working in developing countries who have made a
significant personal contribution to advancing the cause of open access and the
free exchange of research findings.
We received 30
proposals from organisations in 17 developing countries on four continents,
naming individuals who have worked hard to promote Open Access and who have
achieved substantial progress. The selection of a single winner was extremely
difficult as we received nominations for so many individuals who have made
impressive strides by any or all of the following means:-
- establishing OA
institutional repositories;
- setting up or encouraging
conversion to OA journals;
- achieving
establishment of OA mandates requiring research to be OA
on publication, or other policy developments;
- advocating OA
via seminars, publications, workshops, videos;
- training others in the
technology of setting up IRs;
- preparing and
establishing e-learning projects;
- working
towards the acceptance of Creative Commons licensing arrangements for research
publications;
- developing
software for use in OA practices.
Because of the high
standard of the applicants, we have decided to name a single winner, but also to
recognise three other individuals who were very close runners-up. All will
receive a certificate and the winner will receive in addition an engraved plaque
in the next few weeks.
We are very happy to
announce that the winner of the inaugural award is Dr Francis
Jayakanth of the National Centre for
Scientific Information, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India. Dr
Jayakanth played a significant role in the establishment of India’s first
institutional repository (IR) (http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in). He now
manages the IR and has provided technical support for establishing IRs in many
other universities and institutes in India. He has been
the key resource person at many events to train people in setting up IRs and OA
journals. He has delivered presentations on IRs, OA journals, the OAI protocol,
OAI compliance, the benefits of OA to authors and institutions and the role of
libraries. He has developed a free and open source software tool (CDSOAI), which
is widely used.
The Indian Institute of
Science is the most prestigious institute in India and its IR now holds
>31,400 records, making the century-old
institute's research far more globally
visible than before. The University Grants Commission in
India has been impressed by the
IISC’s IR and has directed all universities in India to replicate this
effort.
Francis Jayakanth can
indeed be considered an OA ‘renaissance man’, an advocate and technical expert
in all aspect of Open Access development and an inspiration to all, both at the
research and policy level.
The EPT is proud to
congratulate Dr Jayakanth as our first Award winner. We believe this Award and
the example of our first winner will inspire many others and lead to similarly
impressive nominations in 2012.
The runners-up for this
award were (in alphabetical order):
- Ina Smith,
University of
Stellenbosch, South Africa;
- Tatyan
Zayseva, Khazar
University, Azerbaijan;
-
Xiaolin Zhang, National Science Library, Chinese Academy of
Science.
The EPT wishes to
congratulate them and all who have been proposed, since without exception
they have made a significant personal contribution to the sharing of research
findings across the world. We will be sharing some of their stories and
successes on our blog over the next few weeks.
Electronic Publishing Trust
for Development