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  1. Home > Articles & Issues >
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  3. The Public Knowledge ...
Conference paper

The Public Knowledge Project: Reflections and Directions After Its First Two Decades

Juan Alperin (1) (2), John Willinsky (3), Brian Owen (1) (2), James Macgregor (1) (2), Alec Smecher (1) (2), Kevin Stranack (1) (2)
(1) Simon Fraser University
(2) Simon Fraser University = Université Simon Fraser
(3) Stanford University
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Publication details
Submitted on
June 20, 2018
Accepted on
June 20, 2018
Published on
June 20, 2018
Last modified on
March 31, 2025
Proceedings 1
Connecting the Knowledge Commons: From Projects to Sustainable Infrastructure
Long Papers
DOI
10.4000/proceedings.elpub.2018.18
License
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
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The Public Knowledge Project: Reflections and Directions After Its First Two Decades

Juan Alperin (1) (2), John Willinsky (3), Brian Owen (1) (2), James Macgregor (1) (2), Alec Smecher (1) (2), Kevin Stranack (1) (2)
(1) Simon Fraser University
(2) Simon Fraser University = Université Simon Fraser
(3) Stanford University
Abstract
As the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) enters its third decade, it faces the responsibilities of supporting the more than 10,000 journals using its software and are dependent on PKP continuing to develop the code. In the fall of 2017, PKP, with the support of the Arnold Foundation, contracted the consulting services of BlueSky to Blueprint, with its principal Nancy Maron embarking on an exploration of PKP’s standing and prospects among a sample of those in-volved in scholarly publishing, inclu-ding current, former, and potential users of its software (Maron 2018). This paper presents BlueSky’s findings and PKP’s responses in what may serve as a lesson on the maturing of, and challenges faced by, an open source software project seeking to sustain in-creased global access to research and scholarship.
Keywords
  • [SHS.INFO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Library and information sciences
  • Scholarly publishing
  • Open access
  • Open sources software
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