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CARL and SPARC offer Canadian authors new tool to widen access to published articles
For immediate release
August 15, 2007
For more information, contact:
Tim Mark, CARL
(613) 562-5385
carl@uottawa.ca
Jennifer McLennan, SPARC
(202) 296-2296 ext. 121
jennifer@arl.org
CARL AND SPARC OFFER CANADIAN AUTHORS NEW TOOL TO WIDEN ACCESS TO
PUBLISHED ARTICLES
Popular author copyright addendum adapted for use in Canada
Ottawa, ON and Washington, DC - August 15, 2007 - The Canadian
Association of Research Libraries (CARL) and SPARC (the Scholarly
Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition) today announced the
release of the SPARC Canadian Author Addendum, a new tool for
authors in Canada to retain key rights to the journal articles
they publish.
Traditional publishing agreements often require that authors
grant exclusive rights to the publisher. The new SPARC Canadian
Author Addendum enables authors to secure a more balanced
agreement by retaining select rights, such as the rights to
reproduce, reuse, and publicly present the articles they publish
for non-commercial purposes. It will help Canadian researchers to
comply with granting council public access policies, such as the
Canadian Institutes of Health Research Policy on Access to
Research Outputs. The Canadian Addendum reflects Canadian
copyright law and is an adaptation of the original U.S. version
of the SPARC Author Addendum.
"The SPARC Canadian Author Addendum allows researchers to have
maximum impact and visibility for their publications - with the
comfort of knowing important rights still belong to them," stated
Carolynne Presser, Chair of the CARL Scholarly Communication
Committee and Director of Libraries at the University of
Manitoba.
"The Canadian Addendum is an important contribution to the
ongoing international movement to support authors in making
research articles accessible to all who may benefit from their
findings," said Heather Joseph= , Executive Director of SPARC.
"Canada has been a leader in the move toward increased access to
research and we're pleased to have played a role in collaborating
with CARL on this important initiative."
An explanatory brochure complements the Addendum. Both the
brochure and addendum are available in French and English on the
CARL and SPARC Web sites and will be widely distributed. SPARC,
in conjunction with ARL and ACRL, has also introduced a free Web
cast on Understanding Author Rights. See
http://www.arl.org/sparc/author for details.
For more information, please see the CARL Web site at
http://www.carl-abrc.ca or the SPARC Web site at http://www.arl.org/sparc.
###
CARL
CARL is the leadership organization for the Canadian research
library community. CARL's members represent Canada's 27 major
academic research libraries, Library and Archives Canada, the
Library of Parliament and the Canada Institute for Scientific and
Technical Information (CISTI). For more information see
www.carl-abrc.ca.
SPARC
SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition),
with SPARC Europe and SPARC Japan, is an international alliance
of more than 800 academic and research libraries working to
create a more open system of scholarly communication. SPARC's
advocacy, educational, and publisher partnership programs
encourage expanded dissemination of research. SPARC is on the Web
at http://www.arl.org/sparc.
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