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(1) This procedure sets out requirements for the open dissemination and release of RMIT research and educational scholarly works. (2) Authority for this document is established by the Open Scholarship Policy. (3) This procedure applies to all staff, students, and affiliates, including conjoint, adjunct, emeritus, honorary and visiting appointments of the University and its controlled entities (known as the (4) Consistent with RMIT's commitment to the significance of Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property, RMIT educators, researchers and students will: (5) RMIT is committed to the widest possible dissemination of its research output and acknowledges increased visibility and impact afforded by open research. RMIT encourages its researchers to consider making research outputs open, and acknowledges the cultural, social and economic benefit of this. (6) Researchers will submit the Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM) of published research output to RMIT’s Institutional Repository as soon as possible post publication, or after the set embargo period, following the relevant instructions on the Researcher Portal. (7) Research outputs may be restricted from open dissemination for an indefinite period due to contractual obligations, commercial or cultural sensitivities by the appropriate delegate. (8) By submitting scholarly research publications to RMIT’s Institutional Repository, RMIT authors agree to grant RMIT a perpetual, royalty free, world-wide, non-exclusive licence to store their work, and to make it permanently available in RMIT’s Institutional Repository. (9) Subject to any contractual, funding or publisher licence conditions, RMIT researchers should deposit their accepted manuscripts into the University’s Institutional Repository, noting that: (10) The University Library will provide, administer, and manage the University’s Institutional Repository. The University Library Repository Team will manage publication restrictions as required, verify access rights, and manage relevant embargo periods. (11) The University Institutional Repository accepts traditional and non-traditional research outputs. The following can be deposited: (12) RMIT researchers will ensure the protection of any commercially valuable research output in line with the Intellectual Property Policy and any third-party agreements. (13) RMIT encourages academic staff to explore and adopt open education and learning that is inclusive, accessible and equitable by design. This includes: (14) RMIT encourages the authorship, creation, and use of open educational resources in programs and courses that foster RMIT graduates who are: (15) RMIT requires that all users comply with the Inclusion, Diversity, Equity and Access (IDEA) Framework as far as is reasonably possible. (16) RMIT recommends that open educational resources should be published via an open platform to maximise their discovery and use by others. (17) RMIT University supports the use of Creative Commons licensing for the release of open educational resources and recommends the use of Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial, Non-commercial licence (CC BY-NC). However, educators are free to choose the license that meets their purposes. (18) The dissemination and release of intellectual property (including copyright) is governed by RMIT’s Intellectual Property Policy. In the open dissemination of research and educational scholarly output, the provisions of the Intellectual Property Policy must be applied. (19) In the dissemination of research and educational scholarly works, RMIT staff, students and affiliates will ensure they have the necessary rights of ownership to release research and educational scholarly works as open access to the widest possible audience. Consideration must be given to contractual, copyright and licensing issues to ensure: (20) RMIT authors will ensure: (21) Under the Intellectual Property Policy, students own all IP in the works that they create during their studies, which includes material submitted for assessment. Different provisions in the Intellectual Property Policy apply to researchers and paid PhD students. (22) Where the IP in a resource is created and owned by students, the students as copyright holders can assign an open licence to the work. (23) Where RMIT owns the copyright in an educational resource, the moral rights of the creator must be appropriately acknowledged when released under an open licence, and the copyright owner(s), author(s), date and Creative Commons licence applied must be visibly attributed. (24) Scholarly works and activities that involve Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property and/or its use must be managed in accordance with the Intellectual Property Policy, and the AIATSIS Code of Ethics for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Research. (25) RMIT authors will ensure open access dissemination of scholarly works is compliant with the Privacy Policy. Consent must be obtained for the disclosure of identifiable and sensitive information of persons, including students. RMIT authors are responsible for removing: (26) Refer to the following documents which are established in accordance with this procedure:Open Scholarly Works Dissemination Procedure
Section 1 - Context
Section 2 - Authority
Section 3 - Scope
Section 4 - Procedure
Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP)
Open Research
Open Education
Intellectual Property (IP)
Top of PageSection 5 - Resources
Top of PageSection 6 - Definitions
Term
Definition
Accepted manuscript
Is a version of a research output that must have been through the peer review process, and must have been accepted for publication, and all proposed changes to it must have been made
Indigenous Knowledge Authority
Is a traditional knowledge custodian who must be an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person or persons who has a relationship with that traditional knowledge
Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP)
Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property refers to the rights that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have, and want to have, to protect their Cultural and Intellectual Property. Sometimes the words “Cultural Heritage” are used to mean the same thing. Refer to the ICIP Information Sheet for a full list of the ICIP rights that must be considered in relation to this policy.
Open dissemination
Is the release of scholarly output without a fee to access it
Open educational practices
Are teaching practices, techniques and tools that will foster knowledge creation and sharing in an open environment
Open educational resources
Are teaching practices, techniques and tools that will foster knowledge creation and sharing in an open environment
Open licence
Is a copyright licence that grants permission for the distribution, access, use, and reuse of a copyright work with limited or no restrictions
Open pedagogy
Are models of teaching in an open forum that will be characterised by collaboration, sharing and co-creation with students
Open research practices
Are research practices that will enable and promote collaboration, transparency and reproducibility throughout the entire research lifecycle
Open scholarly practices
Are a range of educational and research practices through which knowledge and scholarly resources are openly disseminated
Open scholarship
Is the creation and sharing of knowledge in the educational and research scholarly environment that will encompass openness
Scholarly educational output
Is any work that is openly published, such as texts, teaching resources, quizzes, images and videos, and other learning materials that can be shared and reused
Scholarly impact
Is the influence and effect that knowledge and scholarly resources have on the world and will include all aspects of educational and research impact
Scholarly research output
Is a traditional or non-traditional research output and may include academic journal articles, books, conference papers, exhibitions, presentations, performances, media interviews, theses, research data
Self-archive
Is a process where an author will deposit a free copy of a scholarly output online to provide open access to it