National Initiatives for Open Science in Europe

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National Initiatives for Open Science in Europe (en)
Authors

Publications

Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication

Kanavou, Kalliopi; Kosanović, Biljana; Lenaki, Katerina; Papadopoulou, Elli; Papastamatiou, Ilias; Sifacaki, Electra; Ševkušić, Milica; Toli, Eleni

(Zadar : University of Zadar, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Kanavou, Kalliopi
AU  - Kosanović, Biljana
AU  - Lenaki, Katerina
AU  - Papadopoulou, Elli
AU  - Papastamatiou, Ilias
AU  - Sifacaki, Electra
AU  - Ševkušić, Milica
AU  - Toli, Eleni
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/13397
AB  - The National Initiatives for Open Science in Europe (NI4OS Europe) project supports the development of the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) by contributing to its portfolio of services, by involving national and regional research communities in the EOSC governance, by strengthening open science (OS) practices, and by promoting the FAIR principles (Macan et al., 2020; Garavelli et al., 2021) to help build the infrastructure and create a favourable environment for open and intensive scholarly communication.
The main instrument in achieving this is the network of 15 national Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) established in the partner countries as national-level coalitions of Open Science stakeholders that have a prominent role and interest in the EOSC. The concept of NOSCI has been developed in response to the specific traits and challenges in the targeted region, based on complex and multilayered analyses of stakeholders, policies, and local contexts (Toli et al., 2020). Inclusive by nature, NOSCIs connect stakeholders from across the research lifecycle at the national level and provide not only a testbed for the formulation of OS policies but also a forum for knowledge dissemination and sharing.
Drawing on a secondary analysis of the abundant data collected and materials produced during the project, this presentation focuses on the challenges identified as the NOSCIs were built – from data collection in the context of landscaping (Kosanović & Ševkušić, 2019) and policy analysis, through concept development, to implementation, testing, and verification (use cases). It highlights the relationship between individual challenges and NOSCI elements that address these challenges.
The challenges are largely owed to diversities within the region, most notably the varying levels of integration into European structures (of the 15 partner countries, eight are not EU members), linguistic diversity, different research governance systems, policy traditions, and available funding. The framework for NOSCI development, the so-called blueprint (Toli et al., 2020), was designed in full recognition of these diversities. It relies on three modular workflows (Toli et al., 2021) and gives maximum flexibility to countries or national initiatives while making sure that all locally specific aspects are addressed.

We believe that the approach adopted by the NI4OS-Europe team could be applied in other highlydiversified environments, as has been demonstrated by the NI4OS-Europe use cases, thanks to the flexible mechanism of interaction between challenges and responses underlying the very concept of NOSCI.
PB  - Zadar : University of Zadar
C3  - PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science
T1  - Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication
SP  - 74
EP  - 75
DO  - 10.15291/pubmet.3952
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13397
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Kanavou, Kalliopi and Kosanović, Biljana and Lenaki, Katerina and Papadopoulou, Elli and Papastamatiou, Ilias and Sifacaki, Electra and Ševkušić, Milica and Toli, Eleni",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The National Initiatives for Open Science in Europe (NI4OS Europe) project supports the development of the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) by contributing to its portfolio of services, by involving national and regional research communities in the EOSC governance, by strengthening open science (OS) practices, and by promoting the FAIR principles (Macan et al., 2020; Garavelli et al., 2021) to help build the infrastructure and create a favourable environment for open and intensive scholarly communication.
The main instrument in achieving this is the network of 15 national Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) established in the partner countries as national-level coalitions of Open Science stakeholders that have a prominent role and interest in the EOSC. The concept of NOSCI has been developed in response to the specific traits and challenges in the targeted region, based on complex and multilayered analyses of stakeholders, policies, and local contexts (Toli et al., 2020). Inclusive by nature, NOSCIs connect stakeholders from across the research lifecycle at the national level and provide not only a testbed for the formulation of OS policies but also a forum for knowledge dissemination and sharing.
Drawing on a secondary analysis of the abundant data collected and materials produced during the project, this presentation focuses on the challenges identified as the NOSCIs were built – from data collection in the context of landscaping (Kosanović & Ševkušić, 2019) and policy analysis, through concept development, to implementation, testing, and verification (use cases). It highlights the relationship between individual challenges and NOSCI elements that address these challenges.
The challenges are largely owed to diversities within the region, most notably the varying levels of integration into European structures (of the 15 partner countries, eight are not EU members), linguistic diversity, different research governance systems, policy traditions, and available funding. The framework for NOSCI development, the so-called blueprint (Toli et al., 2020), was designed in full recognition of these diversities. It relies on three modular workflows (Toli et al., 2021) and gives maximum flexibility to countries or national initiatives while making sure that all locally specific aspects are addressed.

We believe that the approach adopted by the NI4OS-Europe team could be applied in other highlydiversified environments, as has been demonstrated by the NI4OS-Europe use cases, thanks to the flexible mechanism of interaction between challenges and responses underlying the very concept of NOSCI.",
publisher = "Zadar : University of Zadar",
journal = "PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science",
title = "Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication",
pages = "74-75",
doi = "10.15291/pubmet.3952",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13397"
}
Kanavou, K., Kosanović, B., Lenaki, K., Papadopoulou, E., Papastamatiou, I., Sifacaki, E., Ševkušić, M.,& Toli, E.. (2022). Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication. in PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science
Zadar : University of Zadar., 74-75.
https://doi.org/10.15291/pubmet.3952
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13397
Kanavou K, Kosanović B, Lenaki K, Papadopoulou E, Papastamatiou I, Sifacaki E, Ševkušić M, Toli E. Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication. in PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science. 2022;:74-75.
doi:10.15291/pubmet.3952
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13397 .
Kanavou, Kalliopi, Kosanović, Biljana, Lenaki, Katerina, Papadopoulou, Elli, Papastamatiou, Ilias, Sifacaki, Electra, Ševkušić, Milica, Toli, Eleni, "Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication" in PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science (2022):74-75,
https://doi.org/10.15291/pubmet.3952 .,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13397 .

Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication

Kanavou, Kalliopi; Kosanović, Biljana; Lenaki, Katerina; Papadopoulou, Elli; Papastamatiou, Ilias; Sifacaki, Electra; Ševkušić, Milica; Toli, Eleni

(Zadar : University of Zadar, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Kanavou, Kalliopi
AU  - Kosanović, Biljana
AU  - Lenaki, Katerina
AU  - Papadopoulou, Elli
AU  - Papastamatiou, Ilias
AU  - Sifacaki, Electra
AU  - Ševkušić, Milica
AU  - Toli, Eleni
PY  - 2022
UR  - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/13398
AB  - The National Initiatives for Open Science in Europe (NI4OS Europe) project supports the development of the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) by contributing to its portfolio of services, by involving national and regional research communities in the EOSC governance, by strengthening open science (OS) practices, and by promoting the FAIR principles (Macan et al., 2020; Garavelli et al., 2021) to help build the infrastructure and create a favourable environment for open and intensive scholarly communication.The main instrument in achieving this is the network of 15 national Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) established in the partner countries as national-level coalitions of Open Science stakeholders that have a prominent role and interest in the EOSC. The concept of NOSCI has been developed in response to the specific traits and challenges in the targeted region, based on complex and multilayered analyses of stakeholders, policies, and local contexts (Toli et al., 2020). Inclusive by nature, NOSCIs connect stakeholders from across the research lifecycle at the national level and provide not only a testbed for the formulation of OS policies but also a forum for knowledge dissemination and sharing.Drawing on a secondary analysis of the abundant data collected and materials produced during the project, this presentation focuses on the challenges identified as the NOSCIs were built – from data collection in the context of landscaping (Kosanović & Ševkušić, 2019) and policy analysis, through concept development, to implementation, testing, and verification (use cases). It highlights the relationship between individual challenges and NOSCI elements that address these challenges.The challenges are largely owed to diversities within the region, most notably the varying levels of integration into European structures (of the 15 partner countries, eight are not EU members), linguistic diversity, different research governance systems, policy traditions, and available funding. The framework for NOSCI development, the so-called blueprint (Toli et al., 2020), was designed in full recognition of these diversities. It relies on three modular workflows (Toli et al., 2021) and gives maximum flexibility to countries or national initiatives while making sure that all locally specific aspects are addressed.We believe that the approach adopted by the NI4OS-Europe team could be applied in other highlydiversified environments, as has been demonstrated by the NI4OS-Europe use cases, thanks to the flexible mechanism of interaction between challenges and responses underlying the very concept of NOSCI.
PB  - Zadar : University of Zadar
C3  - PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science
T1  - Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication
DO  - 10.5281/zenodo.7315249
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13398
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Kanavou, Kalliopi and Kosanović, Biljana and Lenaki, Katerina and Papadopoulou, Elli and Papastamatiou, Ilias and Sifacaki, Electra and Ševkušić, Milica and Toli, Eleni",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The National Initiatives for Open Science in Europe (NI4OS Europe) project supports the development of the European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) by contributing to its portfolio of services, by involving national and regional research communities in the EOSC governance, by strengthening open science (OS) practices, and by promoting the FAIR principles (Macan et al., 2020; Garavelli et al., 2021) to help build the infrastructure and create a favourable environment for open and intensive scholarly communication.The main instrument in achieving this is the network of 15 national Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) established in the partner countries as national-level coalitions of Open Science stakeholders that have a prominent role and interest in the EOSC. The concept of NOSCI has been developed in response to the specific traits and challenges in the targeted region, based on complex and multilayered analyses of stakeholders, policies, and local contexts (Toli et al., 2020). Inclusive by nature, NOSCIs connect stakeholders from across the research lifecycle at the national level and provide not only a testbed for the formulation of OS policies but also a forum for knowledge dissemination and sharing.Drawing on a secondary analysis of the abundant data collected and materials produced during the project, this presentation focuses on the challenges identified as the NOSCIs were built – from data collection in the context of landscaping (Kosanović & Ševkušić, 2019) and policy analysis, through concept development, to implementation, testing, and verification (use cases). It highlights the relationship between individual challenges and NOSCI elements that address these challenges.The challenges are largely owed to diversities within the region, most notably the varying levels of integration into European structures (of the 15 partner countries, eight are not EU members), linguistic diversity, different research governance systems, policy traditions, and available funding. The framework for NOSCI development, the so-called blueprint (Toli et al., 2020), was designed in full recognition of these diversities. It relies on three modular workflows (Toli et al., 2021) and gives maximum flexibility to countries or national initiatives while making sure that all locally specific aspects are addressed.We believe that the approach adopted by the NI4OS-Europe team could be applied in other highlydiversified environments, as has been demonstrated by the NI4OS-Europe use cases, thanks to the flexible mechanism of interaction between challenges and responses underlying the very concept of NOSCI.",
publisher = "Zadar : University of Zadar",
journal = "PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science",
title = "Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication",
doi = "10.5281/zenodo.7315249",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13398"
}
Kanavou, K., Kosanović, B., Lenaki, K., Papadopoulou, E., Papastamatiou, I., Sifacaki, E., Ševkušić, M.,& Toli, E.. (2022). Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication. in PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science
Zadar : University of Zadar..
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7315249
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13398
Kanavou K, Kosanović B, Lenaki K, Papadopoulou E, Papastamatiou I, Sifacaki E, Ševkušić M, Toli E. Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication. in PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science. 2022;.
doi:10.5281/zenodo.7315249
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13398 .
Kanavou, Kalliopi, Kosanović, Biljana, Lenaki, Katerina, Papadopoulou, Elli, Papastamatiou, Ilias, Sifacaki, Electra, Ševkušić, Milica, Toli, Eleni, "Building National Open Science Cloud Initiatives (NOSCIs) in Southeast Europe: supporting research and scholarly communication" in PUBMET2022: The 9th Conference on Scholarly Communication in the Context of Open Science (2022),
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7315249 .,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13398 .

Beyond Open Access mandates: institutional repositories as building blocks in open scholarly communication

Kosanović, Biljana; Ševkušić, Milica

(Zadar : University of Zadar, 2021)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Kosanović, Biljana
AU  - Ševkušić, Milica
PY  - 2021
UR  - https://pubmet2021.unizd.hr/biljanamilica-abstract/
UR  - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/13396
AB  - Aim: The presentation traces the emerging roles of institutional repositories in Serbia, beyond the main task required by the national Open Science (OS) policy (adopted in 2018): to serve as Green Open Access (OA) venues.

Background: At the time when the national OS policy was adopted (2018), Serbia had already had a developed network of Diamond OA journals and a national repository of PhD theses, but there were only a few fully functional institutional repositories. To comply with the policy, which mandates Open Access to publications, research organizations have undertaken to establish institutional repositories, without dedicated financial support from public funders. Almost three years later, there are around 40 repositories and their content goes beyond the policy requirements. 

Methods: The presence of content types not covered by the OA mandate (posters, images, research data, etc.) and the coverage of content from the period preceding the adoption of the OA mandate are taken as the quantitative indicators of the emerging roles for institutional repositories in Serbia. We analyze content types in around 40 institutional repositories based on data provided by repositories and aggregators. A qualitative analysis based on a survey conducted among repository managers is also presented. Finally, as the authors are also members of a repository development team, a brief overview of measures taken towards supporting the emerging roles of institutional repositories is given.

Results and discussion: The results show that although most institutional repositories in Serbia were established with the aim of ensuring compliance with the OA mandate, research organizations have assigned them other roles, namely: 
to serve as comprehensive digital libraries of the institution’s research outputs as, far back in history as possible, no matter whether the content is OA or not; to serve as a source of information in various reporting procedures (annual reports, promotion procedures, etc.); to showcase the institution’s publishing activity; to make print-only publications, especially monographs, available in a digital environment; to showcase various non-publication outputs (technical reports, posters, promotional materials, students’ works, etc.); to serve as research data repositories.

One of the most important incentives for this is the high visibility of local repositories and their content in international aggregators, discovery platforms (OpenAIRE, BASE, CORE), and search engines (Google Scholar). There is an apparent tendency to make content open whenever possible. Interestingly, institutional repositories in Serbia are still not used for sharing Open Education Resources and training materials.

The initiative to increase content diversity in an institutional repository usually comes either from institutional decision-makers or from librarians. Whether an innovative idea in this direction will be realized or not largely depends on the readiness of repository development teams and librarians to support it.

Conclusion: In most cases, once an institution decides to invest in a repository, it wants to make the best use of it, especially if its functionalities can make up for some missing links in the local infrastructure for scholarly communication (e.g. book publishing platforms or CRIS). Our analysis shows that institutional repositories can successfully meet various innovative needs and serve as crucial building blocks of open scholarly communication if appropriate support from repository developers and librarians is provided. Furthermore, training related to repositories and researchers’ involvement with this type of infrastructure contribute to the development of skills relevant for Open Science and scholarly communication. The fact that innovative initiatives come from within institutions, without any pressure from research funders, indicates that there is an intrinsic interest in open scholarly communication. On the other hand, the lack of incentives from the responsible ministry may be discouraging in the long term.
PB  - Zadar : University of Zadar
C3  - PUBMET2021: The 8th conference on scholarly communication in the context of open science, 15-17 September 2021
T1  - Beyond Open Access mandates: institutional repositories as building blocks in open scholarly communication
DO  - 10.5281/zenodo.5786271
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13396
ER  - 
@conference{
author = "Kosanović, Biljana and Ševkušić, Milica",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Aim: The presentation traces the emerging roles of institutional repositories in Serbia, beyond the main task required by the national Open Science (OS) policy (adopted in 2018): to serve as Green Open Access (OA) venues.

Background: At the time when the national OS policy was adopted (2018), Serbia had already had a developed network of Diamond OA journals and a national repository of PhD theses, but there were only a few fully functional institutional repositories. To comply with the policy, which mandates Open Access to publications, research organizations have undertaken to establish institutional repositories, without dedicated financial support from public funders. Almost three years later, there are around 40 repositories and their content goes beyond the policy requirements. 

Methods: The presence of content types not covered by the OA mandate (posters, images, research data, etc.) and the coverage of content from the period preceding the adoption of the OA mandate are taken as the quantitative indicators of the emerging roles for institutional repositories in Serbia. We analyze content types in around 40 institutional repositories based on data provided by repositories and aggregators. A qualitative analysis based on a survey conducted among repository managers is also presented. Finally, as the authors are also members of a repository development team, a brief overview of measures taken towards supporting the emerging roles of institutional repositories is given.

Results and discussion: The results show that although most institutional repositories in Serbia were established with the aim of ensuring compliance with the OA mandate, research organizations have assigned them other roles, namely: 
to serve as comprehensive digital libraries of the institution’s research outputs as, far back in history as possible, no matter whether the content is OA or not; to serve as a source of information in various reporting procedures (annual reports, promotion procedures, etc.); to showcase the institution’s publishing activity; to make print-only publications, especially monographs, available in a digital environment; to showcase various non-publication outputs (technical reports, posters, promotional materials, students’ works, etc.); to serve as research data repositories.

One of the most important incentives for this is the high visibility of local repositories and their content in international aggregators, discovery platforms (OpenAIRE, BASE, CORE), and search engines (Google Scholar). There is an apparent tendency to make content open whenever possible. Interestingly, institutional repositories in Serbia are still not used for sharing Open Education Resources and training materials.

The initiative to increase content diversity in an institutional repository usually comes either from institutional decision-makers or from librarians. Whether an innovative idea in this direction will be realized or not largely depends on the readiness of repository development teams and librarians to support it.

Conclusion: In most cases, once an institution decides to invest in a repository, it wants to make the best use of it, especially if its functionalities can make up for some missing links in the local infrastructure for scholarly communication (e.g. book publishing platforms or CRIS). Our analysis shows that institutional repositories can successfully meet various innovative needs and serve as crucial building blocks of open scholarly communication if appropriate support from repository developers and librarians is provided. Furthermore, training related to repositories and researchers’ involvement with this type of infrastructure contribute to the development of skills relevant for Open Science and scholarly communication. The fact that innovative initiatives come from within institutions, without any pressure from research funders, indicates that there is an intrinsic interest in open scholarly communication. On the other hand, the lack of incentives from the responsible ministry may be discouraging in the long term.",
publisher = "Zadar : University of Zadar",
journal = "PUBMET2021: The 8th conference on scholarly communication in the context of open science, 15-17 September 2021",
title = "Beyond Open Access mandates: institutional repositories as building blocks in open scholarly communication",
doi = "10.5281/zenodo.5786271",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13396"
}
Kosanović, B.,& Ševkušić, M.. (2021). Beyond Open Access mandates: institutional repositories as building blocks in open scholarly communication. in PUBMET2021: The 8th conference on scholarly communication in the context of open science, 15-17 September 2021
Zadar : University of Zadar..
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5786271
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13396
Kosanović B, Ševkušić M. Beyond Open Access mandates: institutional repositories as building blocks in open scholarly communication. in PUBMET2021: The 8th conference on scholarly communication in the context of open science, 15-17 September 2021. 2021;.
doi:10.5281/zenodo.5786271
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13396 .
Kosanović, Biljana, Ševkušić, Milica, "Beyond Open Access mandates: institutional repositories as building blocks in open scholarly communication" in PUBMET2021: The 8th conference on scholarly communication in the context of open science, 15-17 September 2021 (2021),
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5786271 .,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_13396 .