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Reassembling Scholarly Communications: Histories, Infrastructures, and Global Politics of Open Access

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    SYSNO ASEP0538071
    Document TypeM - Monograph Chapter
    R&D Document TypeMonograph Chapter
    TitleOpen access, “publicity”, and democratic knowledge
    Author(s) Holmwood, John (FLU-F) ORCID, RID, SAI
    Source TitleReassembling Scholarly Communications: Histories, Infrastructures, and Global Politics of Open Access. - Cambridge, Massachusetts : MIT Press, 2020 / Eve P. ; Gray J. - ISBN 978-0-262-53624-0
    Pagess. 181-191
    Number of pages11 s.
    Number of pages438
    Publication formPrint - P
    Languageeng - English
    CountryUS - United States
    Keywordsopen access ; knowledge ; democratization ; public sphere
    Subject RIVAA - Philosophy ; Religion
    OECD category6.5 Other Humanities and the Arts
    Institutional supportFLU-F - RVO:67985955
    DOI10.7551/mitpress/11885.003.0019
    AnnotationThis chapter turns to the ways in which the openness of social media systems and scholarly research are part of a broader turn to neoliberal practices in government policy around higher education. Even as it may be well intentioned, the author claims, open access ends up providing data to organizations that wish harm to our universities. More broadly, though, this chapter also questions the ways in which notions of truth, democracy, and public knowledge circulate in the digital era, bringing a political-economic slant to this chapter. Specifically, how are we to understand the spread of “fake news”, even as more and more original research work becomes openly available?
    WorkplaceInstitute of Philosophy
    ContactChlumská Simona, chlumska@flu.cas.cz ; Tichá Zuzana, asep@flu.cas.cz Tel: 221 183 360
    Year of Publishing2021
Number of the records: 1  

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