Here is a list of the latest articles
Developing countries are attractive places to run clinical trials, but in many places ethical oversight falls short.
Source: Science
24 October 2008
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Indian scientist and journal editor Padmanabhan Balaram discusses open archives — an alternative to open access for science publishing.
9 July 2008
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A US-sponsored course is helping increase South America's capacity to respond to disease outbreaks, write Andreas G. Lescano and colleagues.
Source: Science
31 October 2007
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Andreas von Bubnoff charts the rise of the e-book by analysing the efforts of a variety of organisations to create an online global library.
Source: Nature
1 December 2005
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Leslie Chan, Barbara Kirsop and Subbiah Arunachalam review the benefits that 'open archiving' of scientific knowledge can bring to researchers in the developing world.
14 November 2005
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Leslie Chan, Barbara Kirsop and Subbiah Arunachalam give a comprehensive background to the need for open access publishing.
11 February 2005
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David Dickson looks at the different approaches being taken to increase access to scientific literature for developing-country researchers.
15 March 2004
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Les Grivell gives a rundown of the different approaches being used to free up access to scientific information, including self-archiving and open-access journals.
Source: EMBO reports
4 March 2004
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Maurice Long reports on the progress of the Health InterNetwork Access Initiative (HINARI), which provides institutions in developing countries with free or reduced-price online access to leading biomedical journals.
Source: The BioChemist
5 December 2003
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David Malakoff reports on the initial impact of PLoS Biology — an open-access electronic journal based on author fees launched this month — and examines its chances of long-term success.
Source: Science
24 October 2003
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A new biology journal aims to reinvent the economics of high-quality scientific publishing and make scientific literature freely available to everyone. Declan Butler examines the bottom line.
Source: Nature
9 October 2003
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Massey Beveridge and colleagues from the Office of International Surgery in Canada describe a pioneering project to provide African doctors with access to electronic literature.
Source: British Medical Journal
3 October 2003
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David Malakoff and Daniel Bachtold look at developments on both sides of the Atlantic that have wide-ranging implications for who owns, and who pays for, access to online science journals.
Source: Science
4 July 2003
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The number of scientific papers published by Indian scientists continues to fall. But T. V. Jayan asks whether this is an adequate index of scientific enterprise in the country.
Source: Down to Earth
30 December 2002
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The Library of Alexandria was once the ancient world's premier seat of learning. Alison Abbott explores whether its spirit can be revived in modern-day Egypt.
Source: Nature
10 October 2002
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Originating in a schoolboy’s attempts to popularise science, the Centre for Mass Education in Science now teaches 25,000 rural Bangladeshi students how science and technology can become part of their lives.
22 April 2002
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A selection of papers delivered at a workshop organised jointly by SciDev.Net, the InterAcademy Panel, and held in Tobago, West Indies, on 26 - 28 February 2002.
8 March 2002
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David Dickson remembers the life of Anil Agarwal, a leading Indian environmental activist and founder of the Delhi based Centre for Science and Environment.
24 January 2002
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Katie Mantell finds out how subscriptions to online scientific journals are being offered at significantly reduced prices in developing countries, in response to concern that scientists in poorer nations are unable to afford access to scientific information.
8 October 2001
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