Wednesday, December 31, 2008

For Advice on Publishing in the Digital World, Scholars Turn to Campus Libraries

For Advice on Publishing in the Digital World, Scholars Turn to Campus Libraries

Jennifer Howard

The Chronicle of Higher Education, November 21, 2008

"Rapidly changing" is the term most often used these days to describe the landscape of scholarly communication. Scholars have to clear new and higher hurdles as they bump up against copyright and fair-use issues, open-access mandates, and a baffling array of publication and dissemination models. More institutions are creating or beefing up offices and programs in scholarly communication or hiring librarians with expertise in copyright and intellectual property.

http://chronicle.com/weekly/v55/i13/13a00801.htm  ]

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Iowa State's Global Resource Systems (GRS) Major First in the Nation

Iowa State's Global Resource Systems (GRS) Major First in the Nation

The GRS major was approved by the Board of Regents, State of Iowa in July 2008. Acker said the new major offers an interdisciplinary and systemic approach to understanding complex global resource systems. Those systems include natural resources, agricultural resources (including crops, livestock and aquaculture), human resources, institutional resources, physical and biological resources, food and energy resources, knowledge resources and financial resources.

[ http://www.ag.iastate.edu/aginfo/news_detail.php?var1=705 ]

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Iowa State University's new Biobased Industry Center is sponsoring four research projects designed to answer questions important to the biofuels industry

Iowa State University's new Biobased Industry Center is sponsoring four research projects designed to answer questions important to the biofuels industry.

"The purpose of the center is to study parts of the biofuels industry that have received less attention," said Ron Cox, an interim co-director of the center and the director of Iowa State's Center for Industrial Research and Service  "That's the business and economic side of the industry as opposed to the technical side of biofuel production."

[snip]

The center's first grants range from $40,000 to $50,000 and will support researchers as they:

  • Develop an economic model to evaluate costs for reducing carbon emissions and analyzing different biofuel processing technologies. The study will be led by John Miranowski, an Iowa State professor who's director of the university's Institute of Science and Society and an interim co-director of the Biobased Industry Center; Douglas Karlen, a professor of soil and crop management; and Stuart Birrell, an associate professor of agricultural and biosystems engineering.
  • Build a carbon model to estimate the greenhouse gas emission of biofuels and estimate changes under different policy scenarios. The study will be led by Dermot Hayes, professor and Pioneer Chair in Agribusiness; and Bruce Babcock, director of Iowa State's Center for Agricultural and Rural Development and professor of economics.
  • Develop an economic framework for assessing how land-use changes impact biofuels' greenhouse gas emissions. The study will be led by Babcock.
  • Do a techno-economic analysis of corn stover production, harvest, storage and transport. The study will be led by Robert Anex, associate director for research programs of the Bioeconomy Institute and associate professor of agricultural and biosystems engineering; Birrell; and Matthew Darr, an assistant professor of agricultural and biosystems engineering.

[ http://www.public.iastate.edu/~nscentral/news/2008/dec/BIC.shtml ]

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