Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open

Open data, FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable) and research data management (RDM) are three overlapping but distinct concepts, each emphasizing different aspects of handling and sharing research data. They have different strengths in terms of informing and influencing how researc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rosie Higman, Daniel Bangert, Sarah Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2019-05-01
Series:Insights: The UKSG Journal
Subjects:
RDM
Online Access:https://insights.uksg.org/articles/468
id doaj-2da266ee27ac48f2b6ce6d9ee744cb04
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2da266ee27ac48f2b6ce6d9ee744cb042020-11-24T20:43:07ZengUbiquity PressInsights: The UKSG Journal 2048-77542019-05-0132110.1629/uksg.468433Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and OpenRosie Higman0Daniel Bangert1Sarah Jones2Research Services Librarian (Data), Research Services, Red 1, University of Manchester Library, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M13 9PPScientific Manager, Knowledge Commons Göttingen State and University Library, University of GöttingenAssociate Director, Digital Curation Centre, University of GlasgowOpen data, FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable) and research data management (RDM) are three overlapping but distinct concepts, each emphasizing different aspects of handling and sharing research data. They have different strengths in terms of informing and influencing how research data is treated, and there is much scope for enrichment of data if they are applied collectively. This paper explores the boundaries of each concept and where they intersect and overlap. As well as providing greater definitional clarity, this will help researchers to manage and share their data, and those supporting researchers, such as librarians and data stewards, to understand how these concepts can best be used in an advocacy setting. FAIR and open both focus on data sharing, ensuring content is made available in ways that promote access and reuse. Data management by contrast is about the stewardship of data from the point of conception onwards. It makes no assumptions about access, but is essential if data are to be meaningful to others. The concepts of FAIR and open are more noble aspirations and are, this paper argues, a useful way to engage researchers and encourage good data practices from the outset.https://insights.uksg.org/articles/468Research data managementRDMopen data, FAIR, open science
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rosie Higman
Daniel Bangert
Sarah Jones
spellingShingle Rosie Higman
Daniel Bangert
Sarah Jones
Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open
Insights: The UKSG Journal
Research data management
RDM
open data, FAIR, open science
author_facet Rosie Higman
Daniel Bangert
Sarah Jones
author_sort Rosie Higman
title Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open
title_short Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open
title_full Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open
title_fullStr Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open
title_full_unstemmed Three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, FAIR and Open
title_sort three camps, one destination: the intersections of research data management, fair and open
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Insights: The UKSG Journal
issn 2048-7754
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Open data, FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable) and research data management (RDM) are three overlapping but distinct concepts, each emphasizing different aspects of handling and sharing research data. They have different strengths in terms of informing and influencing how research data is treated, and there is much scope for enrichment of data if they are applied collectively. This paper explores the boundaries of each concept and where they intersect and overlap. As well as providing greater definitional clarity, this will help researchers to manage and share their data, and those supporting researchers, such as librarians and data stewards, to understand how these concepts can best be used in an advocacy setting. FAIR and open both focus on data sharing, ensuring content is made available in ways that promote access and reuse. Data management by contrast is about the stewardship of data from the point of conception onwards. It makes no assumptions about access, but is essential if data are to be meaningful to others. The concepts of FAIR and open are more noble aspirations and are, this paper argues, a useful way to engage researchers and encourage good data practices from the outset.
topic Research data management
RDM
open data, FAIR, open science
url https://insights.uksg.org/articles/468
work_keys_str_mv AT rosiehigman threecampsonedestinationtheintersectionsofresearchdatamanagementfairandopen
AT danielbangert threecampsonedestinationtheintersectionsofresearchdatamanagementfairandopen
AT sarahjones threecampsonedestinationtheintersectionsofresearchdatamanagementfairandopen
_version_ 1716820489836429312