Finland’s Ministry of Education and Culture has awarded the State Awards for Public Information to significant work in the field of public information in science, the arts and technology.
In academic publishing, it is common to assume there is a clear division of labour between researchers and language professionals. However, making a clear distinction between content and language quality is far from straightforward.
The Committee for Public Information (TJNK) has awarded EUR 400 000 as public information grants. The Committee received 412 grant applications, of which 56 were financed. Most of the grants were awarded to non-fiction books.
The first draft of the principles of the Policy on Open Access to Research Materials and Methods and the Policy Component on Open Access to Research Data is open for comments until September 25, 2020.
Metropolia University of Applied Sciences has developed a facilitated publication workshop model to make research and development work easier for authors.