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Institutional announcements
A global force in scholarly publishing, the Public Knowledge Project announced as 間眅埶AV core facility
間眅埶AV has designated the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) the universitys newest core facility, with Kevin Stranack serving as its Operations Director as well as 間眅埶AV Professor Juan Pablo Alperin and professor John Willinsky as its Co-Scientific Directors.
PKP is a multi-university initiative developing free open source software and conducting research to improve the quality and reach of scholarly publishing. Inclusion in 間眅埶AVs Core Facilities Program represents a recognition of PKPs ongoing development as a vital open research infrastructure for digital-era scholarly publishing. Like the other core facilities, PKP is making its resources available to the university, as well as to the larger academic community outside of 間眅埶AV, with its platforms being widely used by researchers and students across the campus and around the world.
History of the Public Knowledge Project
PKP began in 1998, whenin collaborating with a local newspaperWillinsky, then at the University of British Columbia, was surprised to learn that he was not allowed to share research publications with the newspapers readers due to publisher contracts with the library. This lack of public access to knowledge seemed like a missed educational opportunity for the Age of the Internet. It sparked in Willinksy an interest in making research and scholarship free to read, now commonly referred to as open access.
Willinsky was able to direct his Pacific Press Professorship endowment toward PKP, creating an organization devoted to making knowledge public through such strategies as developing open source (free) software for scholarly publishing, which led to Open Journal Systems in 2002, Open Monograph Press in 2013 and Open Preprint Systems in 2020.
Under the technical leadership of Alec Smecher, PKP has into the most widely used scholarly publishing platform in the world. As of 2021, more than 30,000 journals are employing Open Journal Systems in 136 countries to publish research in 60 languages[1], supporting far greater bibliodiversity, as well as open access, than ever before. At the same timeas PKP researchersAlperin and Willinsky have been winning awards for ground-breaking studies in scholarly communication, as PKP has remained, since the outset, a research and development initiative.
The future of PKP
Joining 間眅埶AVs Core Facilities Program enables PKP to further advance its mission of improving the scholarly and public quality of research at 間眅埶AV and worldwide. As a core facility, PKP will draw on the institutional support of the Office of the Vice President, Research and International, in addition to its ongoing close working relationships with the 間眅埶AV Publishing Studies program and the 間眅埶AV Library and its Digital Publishing division, which offers free hosting and support of PKP software to the 間眅埶AV community.
In making this move, PKP will be strengthening its governance structures, as well as increasing its equity, diversity and inclusion, and its decolonization efforts. It will be expanding its hosting and other services to publishers, under the management of Associate Director of Publishing Services, Amanda Stevens. In addition, a number of PKP team members will be joining the 間眅埶AV Administrative and Professional Staff Association.
With this coming year marking the 25th anniversary of PKPs founding, becoming a core facility is undoubtedly PKPs most significant institutional advance to date, growing out of a productive partnership with 間眅埶AV Library and the 間眅埶AV Canadian Centre for Studies in Publishing that began in 2005, says Willinsky.
To help the larger community gain a sense of all the important changes afoot, PKP has also renewed its web presence with a revamped website where users can find information about the software, research, hosting and other services that distinguish PKPs contributions to the Core Facilities Program. The site also describes how people can get involved with PKP in creating a future in which research and scholarship are far greater public resources on a global scale.
Learn more about PKP, its services, people and community .
[1] Khanna, S., Raoni, J., Smecher, A., Alperin, J. P., Ball, J., & Willinsky, J. (2022). Details of publications using software by the Public Knowledge Project [Data set]. Harvard Dataverse.