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Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) – Tagging help by OABN

Background

The Open Access Tracking Project (OATP), is a crowd-sourced social tagging project that runs on open-source software. It harnesses the power of the community to capture news and comment on open access (OA) in every academic field and region of the world. We want to help expand its coverage of OA books — and you can help!

How

The OATP has two missions:

    • To create real-time alerts for OA-related developments, and
    • To organize knowledge of the field, by tag or subtopic, for easy searching and sharing.

The OATP publishes a large primary feed and hundreds of smaller secondary feeds – one of which (‘’oa.books’’) is a valuable resource for the OA book community. (It’s published alongside our blog posts, and provides valuable updates about developments and discussions related to OA books.)

There are two ways you can contribute to this feed.

1) Become a tagger yourself

If you are interested in tagging for the OATP, please have a look at this post, which explains the basics. Feel free to contact one of the OABN coordinators (info@oabooksnetwork.org) with any basic setup questions — all the coordinators have signed up, so they should be able to help you with any initial difficulties.

2) Ask the OABN

The OATP is a crowd-sourced project, depending on the ‘many eyeballs’ principle. The more contributors there are, from as many different backgrounds as possible, the better its coverage will be. However, lots of things might prevent you from becoming a tagger: for example, time constraints, a lack of technical expertise, or other restrictions.

The OABN coordinators would therefore be happy to tag online content related to open access books that is suggested by community members (to get a sense of the sorts of things that are currently tagged, see the OATP feed ‘’oa.books’’, which is published alongside our blog posts).

To share a suggested tag for the ‘’oa.books’’ OATP feed, please notify us and share the URL with the OABN via one of these two channels:

    • Twitter: By tagging the OABN twitter handle @oabooks and including the URL;
    • E-mail: By e-mailing the OABN at info@oabooksnetwork.org with the URL and subject header ‘’Suggested tag for the OATP’’.

One of the OABN coordinators will review the link and tag it if suitable.
Please do not expect to receive replies or confirmations of receipt from the OABN. To check whether your suggested link has been tagged, simply check the ‘’oa.books’’ feed within a few days.

More information about the OATP

If you would like more information about the OATP, watch our boOkmArks discussion with the founder of the OATP, Peter Suber (Director of the Harvard Office for Scholarly Communication and the the Harvard Open Access Project, and Senior Researcher at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society), and two active taggers, Milica Ševkušić (Librarian at the Institute of Technical Sciences of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Belgrade, Serbia; Member of the Repository Development Team at the University of Belgrade Computer Centre; and EIFL Open Access Country Coordinator in Serbia) and Gary Price (librarian, writer and consultant).

2021-01-11
By: Tom Mosterd
On: January 11, 2021
In: Metadata, OABN update
Previous Post: 2020 with OABN
Next Post: mediastudies.press: A conversation with founder Jeff Pooley

RSS Open Access Tracking Project – oa.books news

  • Guest Post — Diamond Open Access: A Lifeline for the Monograph? - The Scholarly Kitchen April 7, 2026
    Diamond Open Access (Diamond OA) has received much attention in recent years as a possible answer to some of the toughest questions in scholarly publishing. But what do researchers themselves actually think about it? As part of the Strengthening Diamond Open Access in the Netherlands program, we found that while many researchers welcome the principle of Diamond […]
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    Does open access mean accessible to all? This free webinar will delve into the essential but often challenging topic of accessibility, with a particular focus on how smaller publishers can make their open access books more accessible to users of assistive technology. Highlighting the practical resources available to inform and help publishers seeking to make […]
  • OAPEN-EU Project: Insights from EU-funded authors April 7, 2026
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  • Factors influencing the adoption of open access to longform publications in regional and national contexts April 3, 2026
    "This report, commissioned by the University of Leeds and the Knowledge Equity Network, examines the factors influencing adoption of open access (OA) for longform scholarly publications (books, edited collections, and chapters) across different regional and national contexts. The work draws on a unique partnership of institutions spanning multiple continents, united by a shared interest in multilateral approaches to open scholarship and more equitable knowledge exchange."
  • Usage of higher education institutional repositories and “Green” open access for longform publications | The British Academy April 1, 2026
    "In March 2025, the British Academy commissioned Information Power to carry out a study into how higher education institution repositories and “Green” OA is used for longform publications. The report brings together interviews and surveys with library leaders, quantitative data, and the perspectives of academics in the humanities and social sciences and shows a nuanced […]

RSS OA Books News – via Open Access Tracking Project (OATP)

  • Guest Post — Diamond Open Access: A Lifeline for the Monograph? - The Scholarly Kitchen
  • How to make your open access books more accessible (and why it matters)
  • OAPEN-EU Project: Insights from EU-funded authors
  • Factors influencing the adoption of open access to longform publications in regional and national contexts
  • Usage of higher education institutional repositories and “Green” open access for longform publications | The British Academy

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