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A newsletter and curated collection of 14962 articles on science policy
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Web
Careers
Funding

Rent or Conference - Early-career Researchers Shouldn't Have to Choose

nature
Careers
Funding

Rent or Conference - Early-career Researchers Shouldn't Have to Choose

Academic-conference season is upon us, says Jennifer Tsang. Should I advance my career? Or pay my rent?

nature
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Funding
Industry

An HIV Treatment Cost Taxpayers Millions. The Government Patented It. But a Pharma Giant Is Making Billions.

washingtonpost
Funding
Industry

An HIV Treatment Cost Taxpayers Millions. The Government Patented It. But a Pharma Giant Is Making Billions.

The extraordinary standoff between the CDC and a drug company over patent rights raises a big question for the Trump administration: How aggressively should the government attempt to enforce its patents against an industry partner?

washingtonpost
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Publishing
Open Access

Emerging Trends in the Academic Publishing Lifecycle

scholarlykitchen
Publishing
Open Access

Emerging Trends in the Academic Publishing Lifecycle

The academic publication lifecycle has undergone radical changes over the past several years. These changes have a significant impact on how scholarship will be written, published, promoted, and read in the future.

scholarlykitchen
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Open Access
Funding

To Gather Insights into Open Rewards and Incentives, Survey Targets 200 European Funders

sparceurope
Open Access
Funding

To Gather Insights into Open Rewards and Incentives, Survey Targets 200 European Funders

This week, SPARC Europe, in consultation with ALLEA, The European Foundation Centre (EFC) and Science Europe, sent surveys to almost 200 funding bodies throughout Europe. 

sparceurope
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Clinical Trials

Top US Institutes Still Aren't Reporting Clinical-Trial Results on Time

nature
Clinical Trials

Top US Institutes Still Aren't Reporting Clinical-Trial Results on Time

US law requires researchers to post study findings on a public registry within a year of completion - or face heavy fines.

nature
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Publishing

Kudos and DataCite Partnership Substantially Advances Communications, Tracking and Impact Potential for Research Projects and Programs

web
Publishing

Kudos and DataCite Partnership Substantially Advances Communications, Tracking and Impact Potential for Research Projects and Programs

Kudos, the award-winning service for accelerating research impact through strategic communications management, has today announced a partnership with DataCite.

web
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Retractions
Publishing

Elsevier Looking into How "unorthodox" Paper Featuring Ancient Astronauts Was Published

retractionwatch
Retractions
Publishing

Elsevier Looking into How "unorthodox" Paper Featuring Ancient Astronauts Was Published

Elsevier is looking into how one of its journals published a paper which makes bizarre claims about the knowledge of the ancients.

retractionwatch
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Integrity

Plagiarism Detectors Are a Crutch, and a Problem

nature
Integrity

Plagiarism Detectors Are a Crutch, and a Problem

Academics and editors need to stop pretending that software always catches recycled text and start reading more carefully, says Debora Weber-Wulff.

nature
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Open Data

Implementing Publisher Policies that Inform, Support and Encourage Authors to Share Data

insights
Open Data

Implementing Publisher Policies that Inform, Support and Encourage Authors to Share Data

Open research data is one of the key areas in the expanding open scholarship movement. Scholarly journals and publishers find themselves at the heart of the shift towards openness. In this article we present two case studies which examine the experiences of Taylor & Francis and Springer Nature rolling out data-sharing policies. 

insights
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News
Science Communication

World Conference of Science Journalists 2019

web
Science Communication

World Conference of Science Journalists 2019

The World Conference of Science Journalists 2019 will be taking place in Lausanne (Switzerland) from 1-5 July 2019. 

web
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Open Access

Paywalls Block Scientific Progress. Research Should Be Open to Everyone

web
Open Access

Paywalls Block Scientific Progress. Research Should Be Open to Everyone

To democratise scholarly publishing, individual academics need to take action.

web
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News
Science Politics

Why the European Elections Matter for Science

sciencebusiness
Science Politics

Why the European Elections Matter for Science

The upcoming European Parliament elections that will shape EU politics for the next five years and beyond will be fought on many issues, including science.

sciencebusiness
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News
UK
Open Access
Humanities

Research Excellence Framework must 'bring Hammer Down' on Open Access Books

timeshighereducation
UK
Open Access
Humanities

Research Excellence Framework must 'bring Hammer Down' on Open Access Books

Implementing the mandate for open access monographs will be complex but that is the price of 'being the leader', says Cameron Neylon.

timeshighereducation
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News
Research

Introducing the PID Graph

web
Research

Introducing the PID Graph

Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are not only important to uniquely identify a publication, dataset, or person, but the metadata for these persistent identifiers can provide unambiguous linking between persistent identifiers of the same type, e.g. journal articles citing other journal articles, or of different types, e.g. linking a researcher and the datasets they produced.

web
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ERC
UK

UK-based Scientists Bag 20 Per Cent of the Latest ERC Advanced Research Grants

sciencebusiness
ERC
UK

UK-based Scientists Bag 20 Per Cent of the Latest ERC Advanced Research Grants

UK-based researchers won the largest share of 222 advanced research grants announced by the European Research Council on 28 March. The grants have a total value of €540 million.

sciencebusiness
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Opinion
Brexit

Scientists for EU | Why The President of the Royal Society Signed the Revoke Article 50 Petition

web
Brexit

Scientists for EU | Why The President of the Royal Society Signed the Revoke Article 50 Petition

web
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News
Gender

Societies Take a Stand Against Harassment with New Initiative

science
Gender

Societies Take a Stand Against Harassment with New Initiative

![Figure][1] At the AAAS meeting, Hamburg said scientists must address cultural shifts in their fields. PHOTO: ROBB COHEN PHOTOGRAPHY & VIDEO The American Association for the Advancement of Science has joined 77 leading academic and professional societies in a new group to address sexual harassment in science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and medicine (STEMM). The Societies Consortium on Sexual Harassment in STEMM, launched 15 February, acknowledges the unique role that professional societies have in setting standards and taking action on sexual and gender harassment in the sciences, its leaders said at the 2019 AAAS Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. "We need to put our positions on the record," said AAAS senior adviser Shirley Malcom during a panel session that announced the consortium. "Harassment of any kind is death to our enterprise. We are trying to attract and encourage talent, but when we don't provide a climate that is safe, we either push them out or we don't get them in to begin with." The consortium will provide research, resources, and guidance to address sexual harassment in the member societies, as well as more broadly in the fields they represent. As a start, the group will focus on model policies and procedures for society honors and awards. In September 2018, the AAAS Council approved a new policy that established sexual and gender-based harassment as a breach of professional ethics that could lead to the revocation of AAAS Fellow status. AAAS has also joined the American Educational Resource Association and 73 scientific societies in opposing proposed changes to the federal Title IX law that would narrow the definition of sexual harassment and restrict processes for reporting harassment at U.S. schools and colleges. AAAS "recognizes that in our role of defending the conditions under which science can thrive, we must promote diversity, protect against bias, and foster opportunity," the society's CEO, Rush Holt, said at a breakfast for international reporters at the Annual Meeting. A 2018 analysis by the U.S. National Academies concluded that more than 50% of women faculty and staff, and 20 to 50% of women students, at U.S. academic institutions report having been sexually harassed. These reports and others confirm that the scientific community "is not immune" to problems of harassment and prejudice that have gained prominence in recent years, said Margaret Hamburg in her presidential address to open the 2019 meeting. "We must recognize that, in our own community, certain groups are, and have always been, disenfranchised in ways that harm well-being and prevent people from fulfilling their potential," said Hamburg, who now serves as AAAS Board chair. "It is no longer enough to be concerned, even outraged, by this problem. It's time to fix it." Attendees discussed issues related to women and underrepresented minorities across several scientific symposia and career workshops throughout the meeting, including the disparate numbers of women in the life sciences compared to engineering and computer science, the underrepresentation of women as first and last authors in top-tier journal papers, and the specific challenges faced by minorities in the science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) career pipeline. Harassment, bias, and disenfranchisement of women and underrepresented minorities take a toll on the national research and innovation enterprise, said Kelvin Droegemeier, head of the U.S. Office of Science & Technology Policy (OSTP), in a keynote speech at the meeting. "The enhancement of diversity in STEM is absolutely essential. It is not an option, it is a national imperative and progress is needed right now." The speech was Droegemeier's first major public address since taking on the role of White House OSTP director in January. Echoing remarks by Hamburg and others at the meeting, Droegemeier suggested that scientists could "light a path for others" on the issue of harassment. "The standard of behavior that we expect from the scientific community must apply everywhere that research is conducted." The Washington, D.C., meeting, held from 14 through 17 February, was the 185th gathering of AAAS. Under the theme "Science Transcending Boundaries," participants discussed ways to enhance and protect science's international collaborations from trends such as the rise in nationalism in the United States and other countries. "We want to continue to support and emphasize that kind of science which has proven so productive rather than retreat into an approach that is really focused on what we are doing domestically," said Hamburg, who chose the meeting theme at the start of her AAAS presidency. Other topics at the meeting blurred boundaries between scientific disciplines and suggested new ways for researchers to work across their fields. In several symposia and lectures, speakers noted the importance of collaborations with social science researchers in order to meet the challenges posed by robotics and artificial intelligence, respond to natural disasters, and prepare for the local economic impacts of climate change. Family Science Days, a free weekend event held by AAAS in conjunction with its Annual Meeting since 2004, gave the public a chance to do experiments like extracting strawberry DNA and to participate in conversations with researchers-with some interviews conducted by students wielding reporters' notebooks courtesy of the public engagement program Science Storytellers. "What makes Family Science Days unique is that it is incredibly interactive," said Stacey Baker, who organizes the event for the AAAS Center for Public Engagement with Science and Technology. "When deciding who's exhibiting, everything is based on what hands-on activity they're providing for the kids. It's a place where they can really jump right in and experience the science for themselves." [1]: pending:yes

science
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Open Access

French ISPs Ordered to Block Sci-Hub and LibGen

torrentfreak
Open Access

French ISPs Ordered to Block Sci-Hub and LibGen

The High Court of Paris has ordered several of the largest French ISPs to block access to the pirate libraries LibGen and Sci-Hub. The decision is a setback for the sites that have come under increasing pressure.

torrentfreak
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Opinion
Peer Review
Essay

Scientific Autonomy, Public Accountability, and the Rise of “Peer Review” in the Cold War United States

web
Peer Review
Essay

Scientific Autonomy, Public Accountability, and the Rise of “Peer Review” in the Cold War United States

This essay traces the history of refereeing at specialist scientific journals and at funding bodies and shows that it was only in the late twentieth century that peer review came to be seen as a process central to scientific practice

web
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Opinion
Gender

Alessandro Strumia Letter: Keep Gender Bias out of Science

web
Gender

Alessandro Strumia Letter: Keep Gender Bias out of Science

The views of Alessandro Strumia, as expressed in your story "My big bang theory is: women don't like physics" (News Review, last week), are based on a biased interpretation of the data and are at...

web
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Opinion
Careers
Education

Are PhDs Just Cheap Labour for Universities?

theguardian
Careers
Education

Are PhDs Just Cheap Labour for Universities?

PhD grads complain that there are too few academic jobs. Should universities recruit fewer or do they need to support their postgrads into alternative careers?

theguardian
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News
Open Access

American Chemical Society and Max Planck Institutes Partner on Transformative Open Access Plan

acs
Open Access

American Chemical Society and Max Planck Institutes Partner on Transformative Open Access Plan

American Chemical Society: Chemistry for Life.

acs
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News
Education
Careers

When Universities Shortchange Grad Students, Bachelors Students Suffer Too

psmag
Education
Careers

When Universities Shortchange Grad Students, Bachelors Students Suffer Too

A new report highlights gross inequities in health coverage for grad students - and a lack of access to mental-health resources more generally.

psmag
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Research Data
Open Data

Ten Principles for Machine-Actionable Data Management Plans

ploscompbiol
Research Data
Open Data

Ten Principles for Machine-Actionable Data Management Plans

Data management plans can have thematic, machine-actionable richness with added value for all stakeholders: researchers, funders, repository managers, research administrators, data librarians, and others.

ploscompbiol
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Open Access

Highly Profitable Medical Journal Says Open Access Publishing Has Failed. Right.

forbes
Open Access

Highly Profitable Medical Journal Says Open Access Publishing Has Failed. Right.

The New England Journal of Medicine just published an editorial saying open access publishing isn't necessary, because they already make most of their content free. What are they so worried about?

forbes
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Preservation
Climate

Netflix's 'Our Planet' Says What Other Nature Series Have Omitted

The Atlantic
Preservation
Climate

Netflix's 'Our Planet' Says What Other Nature Series Have Omitted

In a groundbreaking move, the beautiful but uncomfortable documentary forces viewers to acknowledge their own complicity in the decline of nature.

The Atlantic
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News
Gender

National Academy of Sciences Will Vote on Ejecting Sexual Harassers

sciencemag
Gender

National Academy of Sciences Will Vote on Ejecting Sexual Harassers

The U.S. National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., will ask its members this month to change the organization’s bylaws to allow proven sexual harassers and those guilty of other misconduct to be ejected from their ranks.

sciencemag
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Data Protection
Open Data

Taking Knowledge Preservation to the Next Level: New Partnership Between Protocols.io, Addgene, PLOS

protocols
Data Protection
Open Data

Taking Knowledge Preservation to the Next Level: New Partnership Between Protocols.io, Addgene, PLOS

Digital information carries a significant risk of disappearing, as one of the “fathers of the Internet” Vint Cerf has been warning. 

protocols
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Open Access
Humanities

Insights into the Economy of Open Scholarship: A Look into the Open Library of Humanities

openlibhums
Open Access
Humanities

Insights into the Economy of Open Scholarship: A Look into the Open Library of Humanities

Martin Paul Eve, Co-director and Co-founder the Open Library of Humanities was interviewed as part of the Insights into the Economy of Open Scholarship collection of interviews.

openlibhums
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Data Protection
Research Data

11 Ways to Avert a Data-storage Disaster

nature
Data Protection
Research Data

11 Ways to Avert a Data-storage Disaster

Hard-drive failures are inevitable, but data loss doesn't have to be.

nature
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