The FORCE2015 Research Communication and e-Scholarship Conference brings together researchers, scholars, librarians, archivists, information scientists, publishers, and research funders in a lively forum – to broaden awareness of current efforts across disciplines, but also to define the future through discussions, challenge projects, demonstrations, and the seeding of new partnerships and collaborations. Individually and collectively, we aim to bring about a positive change in scholarly communications through both the effective use of information technology and a deeper understanding of the nature of evolving scholarly practice.
The FORCE2015 conference will be held 12-13 January, 2015, at
the University of Oxford, UK. On the preceding day, 11
January 2015, there will be workshops, informal and
formal collaborations, and business meetings associated with the
main conference.
There are two themes for abstracts:
There are also opportunities to propose pre-conference workshops.
Force11 (The Future of Research Communication and eScholarship)
was founded in 2011 to promote research in scholarly and
scientific communication. It functions as a meeting ground and
community of interest and practice for researchers across
disciplines and sectors who are interested in the future of
scholarly communication. A highlight of the meeting is the "$1k
challenge"--a microgrant competition in which community groups
propose ideas for $1k seed money grants.
Although the initial membership of Force11 drew heavily from the
natural and life sciences, it is now broadly interdisciplinary and
inter-sector. Its membership includes humanists, social
scientists, natural and life scientists, librarians, funders, and
commercial and non-profit publishers and publishing professionals.
It is particularly interested in expanding its membership in mid-
and low-income economic regions and in further developing its
activities within humanities and social science publishing.
It is also a very welcoming group. If you or your students have
ideas for papers or poster on scholarly communication activity,
please consider submitting an abstract to the conference. Thanks
to the generosity of our sponsors and the Moore and Sloan
foundations, there is also significant money available to support
student participation.
If you have any questions, feel free to contact me!
-dan
-- From my Ubuntu notebook Daniel Paul O'Donnell Professor of English University of Lethbridge Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4 Canada +1 403 393-2539