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Kenya's top university opens up its research

Calvin Otieno

7 February 2013 | EN

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Nairobi University's research will be available online for free

Flickr/nist6ss

[NAIROBI] One of Kenya's leading universities, the University of Nairobi, has adopted an open access policy to research articles and other academic materials produced by its staff.

By placing all scholarly articles in an online 'digital repository', the university aims to increase the visibility of its research output and enhance collaboration with researchers in other parts of the world.

The university adopted its open access policy in December.

SPEED READ

  • University wants its research to reach many and have an impact on policy
  • Articles, data and images will be added to online digital repository
  • Resource could make it easier to share data and reduce research duplication

Rosemary Otando, a senior librarian at the university, says there is a vast amount of the data and knowledge waiting to be discovered, but this is only possible when research literature is not constrained by access barriers.

"The university attracts funds worth tens of millions of US dollars for research, but the findings have, in the past, only been accessed by a privileged few since most of them are published in costly peer-reviewed journals and the high internet subscription fees mean that users in developing countries cannot access the information they need to rise to the challenges of development," Otando tells SciDev.Net.

The open access policy, she adds, is intended to ensure that research and other relevant work reaches many and has a direct impact on policies and practices in Kenya, Africa and worldwide.

It is also designed to increase citations, reduce the knowledge divide, maximise the visibility of the university's academic output and ensure its preservation.

As part of the initiative, the university encourages its academic staff to publish their work in peer-reviewed open access journals.

"Since the cost barrier has been eliminated, everybody is free to access the resources. Therefore open access will ensure that relevant research findings can be used to help those in need says Otando.

Materials that can be added to the online depository include journal articles, research data, books, audio and video files, theses, presentations, images and conference proceedings.

Nerisa Kamar, assistant librarian at the Nairobi-based UN-HABITAT, the UN agency for human settlements, thinks the initiative will "promote the relevancy and enhance the dissemination of in-house publications and resources, enable the sharing of data and help to reduce research duplication and the resulting waste of resources".

According to Kamar, the open access policy will also market the institution's research programmes, assist in reducing plagiarism and act as a quality assurance tool to help the university meet the international standards on what should be available on the OA database and the goal of becoming a world-class university.

This article has been produced by SciDev.Net's Sub-Saharan Africa desk.

Link to digital repository

Comments (2)

Ravi Murugesan ( AuthorAID at INASP | India )

7 February 2013

If a Uni Nairobi researcher has an article published in a subscription journal, would they be able to make it available in the new repository? Would they know which version to make available (accepted vs published)? How will compliance to the new policy be tracked? These important questions should also be addressed at the outset.

Jeremiah Asaka ( Ohio University | United States of America )

8 February 2013

This move has the potential to reduce the knowledge gap, especially on climate change, that is plaguing most of the African continent. With up to date research findings on topics like agriculture, tourism, fishing and even disaster management, available to the public freely at the press of a button, it is no doubt the open access repository will greatly improve knowledge access and information dissemination. This will subsequently have a positive impact on the policy front as well thought out solutions to local problems will be readily available to policy makers for consideration. Good job!

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