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Registration for #OSFair2025 is open until 31 July!

Join the global #OpenScience community at the iconic #CERN Science Gateway, Geneva – 15–17 Sept 2025 – for 3 days of collaboration & innovation.

Theme: Fusing Forces – Accelerating Open Science through Collaboration

Keynotes, panels, workshops, demos, posters & more from research assessment to AI.

🔗 Register: opensciencefair.eu/registratio

🔎 Programme: opensciencefair.eu/2025/progra

Photo Credits: CERN

#CommunityEngagement #OpenAIRE @OpenAIRE

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Very interesting new resource presented by #OSMI: The Principles of Open Science Monitoring (2025): doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1580748

ZenodoThe Principles of Open Science MonitoringTo fully take advantage of the adoption of the 2021 UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science, transparent and representative monitoring must be put in place to drive and support the intended change. It is also vital to identify effective actions and priority gaps. To compensate for the lack of global guidelines on open science monitoring, the French Ministry of Higher Education and Research initially brought together a group of French experts (Université de Lorraine, Inria) to work on a proposal for common monitoring principles. This text served as a basis for a conference which gathered international experts at the Paris UNESCO headquarters in December 2023 (get access to the presentations), leading to the Open Science Monitoring Initiative (OSMI). OSMI and UNESCO then conducted an international consultation to gather opinions from around the world to ensure that the Principles meet a variety of needs, approaches and contexts worldwide. In the past few months, the OSMI Initiators and the OSMI Coordination Committee have painstakingly integrated the feedback from more than 150 experts worldwide, from 41 countries on the five continents into the draft principles. We are now proud to announce the publication of the final internationally agreed upon version of the Principles of Open Science Monitoring. These Principles focus on three key pillars: (1) relevance and significance, (2) transparency and reproducibility, and (3) self-assessment and responsible use. They have been drafted with differing stakeholder contexts, capacities, and resources in mind, consistently considering both qualitative and quantitative outputs and outcomes. Importantly, the Principles are not intended for assessing individual researchers. In addition, they are intended to be more aspirational than prescriptive. We hope that these Principles will serve as the framework of past and upcoming open science monitoring systems and will be endorsed worldwide. About OSMI: https://open-science-monitoring.org/ This deposit is composed of: The Principles of Open Science Monitoring in English The Principles of Open Science Monitoring in French The references used to create the Principles The list of contributors who have endorsed this final version

Captivating talks and discussions during the conference „Open Science: Monitoring Progress, Assessing Impact“

Promising avenues and ideas were investigated on how to further develop international, national, regional as well as institutional approaches and collaborations to advance #OpenScience for the benefit of all!

Guiding these discussions: #UNESCO Recommendation on Open Science (2021): unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/

How can we responsibly assess research that champions openness, collaboration and real-world impact?

At #OSFair2025, the Research Assessment track brings together experts exploring new practices, infrastructures, and ethical frameworks.

6 sessions + 3 posters covering reform, monitoring, policy, and beyond.

Join us: opensciencefair.eu/registratio

#OSFair2025 #OpenScience #ResearchAssessment #Infrastructure #SciencePolicy #OpenAIRE #CERN @CERN @OpenAIRE

🔎 How FAIR is your metadata?

Join the GraspOS Training "Achieving Metadata Excellence, from compliance to FAIRness" to learn about the @OpenAIRE Metadata Validator and how it can help improve the quality, openness, FAIRness and interoperability of your metadata.
This session will show how the Validator helps you comply with OpenAIRE Guidelines and align with the FAIR principles, helping you make your content more visible and reusable.

📆 1 July 2025
⏰ 10:00-11:00 CEST
🎤 Leonidas Pispiringas (Athena Research Center)
📍 Virtual event via Zoom

Register now 👉 graspos.eu/training-material