Partager sur Facebook Imprimer la page
Centre de Ressources et d'Information sur les Multimédias pour l'Enseignement Supérieur

Berlin7 Open Access Conference Opening Ceremony - Eberhard Bodenschatz

Rechercher un programme

Rechercher un programme

Vidéos de la même collection

Berlin7 Open Access Conference Opening Ceremony - Eberhard Bodenschatz

OPEN ACCESS REACHING DIVERSE COMMUNITIES

Voir le lien : http://www.berlin7.org/
The 7th Berlin Open Access Conference will take place at the Panthéon-Sorbonne University in Paris on 2-4 December 2009. As well as taking stock of past activities, the conference will focus on the question of how to get the different communities more actively involved.
About the Berlin Declaration
In 2003, leading European research institutes and the scientific community signed the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities on the Internet. The declaration followed on from the Budapest Open Access Initiative in 2002. In signing the declaration, governments, research institutions, funding agencies, libraries, archives and museums committed themselves to taking concrete steps to promote the Internet as a medium for disseminating global knowledge.
Since 2003, the signatories have met annually at international conferences to report on the significant headway made in open access to the results of scientific research.
The commitment of French research to Open Access
The leading research institutes in France have played an active part in the Open Access Initiative from the outset. A Memorandum of Understanding signed by the universities and most of the country’s foremost research organisations strengthened the commitment of the French scientific community to Open Archives. The choice of the Sorbonne as the venue for the 7th Berlin conference is a further indication of this commitment.
Berlin 7 is an international showcase, during which France will be able to highlight its efforts in favour of open access to scientific knowledge, as well as the involvement of all the various players. It also provides an opportunity to present the concrete measures taken in this area by French research organisations, in particular through achievements such as the national HAL (Hyper Article on Line) platform.

Date de réalisation :

02/12/2009

Durée du programme :

6 minute(s) et 9 secondes

Classification Dewey :

Généralités

Catégorie :

Conférences

Niveau :

Tous publics / hors niveau

Disciplines :

Fiche LOM-FR :

Obtenir la fiche

Langue :

Anglais


Générique :

Réalisateur(s) :

INRIA

BODENSCHATZ Eberhard

(Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization)

Born in 1959, in Rehau. He received his doctorate in theoretical physics from the University of Bayreuth in 1989. In 1991, during his postdoctoral research at the University of California at Santa Barbara, he received a faculty position in experimental physics at Cornell University. From 1992 until 2005, during his tenure at Cornell he was a visiting professor at the University of California at San Diego (1999-2000). In 2003 he became a Scientific Member of the Max Planck Society and an Adjunct Director (2003-2005)/ Director (since 2005) at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization. He continues to have close ties to Cornell University, where he is Adjunct Professor of Physics and of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (since 2005).

Editor / Editor in Chief New Journal of Physics (2002-2004 / since 2005); Editor Physica D (2001-2005); Member at Large, Executive Committee of the Topical Group on Statistical and Nonlinear Physics of the APS (1999-2003); Member of the Cornell University’s Library Board (1998-2006); Co-Director Program on Pattern Formation in Physics and Biology, KITP, Santa Barbara (2003)