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The citizen science guide is designed to be a practical and compact gateway publication for the purpose of assisting research libraries to start setting up a citizen science programme. #cs4rl

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  • Citizen Science Skilling for Library Staff, Researchers, and the Public - edited by Jitka Stilund Hansen - Published Nov 2021
  • Library Infrastructures & Citizen Science edited by Kirsty Wallis - Publishing ETA April 2022
  • Open Science Practice & Citizen Science edited by Bastian Greshake Tzovaras - Publishing ETA April 2022
  • Developing Guidelines & Citizen Science edited by Paul Ayris - Publishing ETA Summer 2022
  • Collated four part series as one volume: Citizen Science for Research Libraries – A Guide - Publishing ETA Summer 2022

New release on its way! Library Infrastructures & Citizen Science

Section 2: Library Infrastructures & Citizen Science edited by Kirsty Wallis.

cover cs4rl infra

26 Nov '21 - Book Launch: Citizen Science Skilling for Library Staff, Researchers, and the Public

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Book Information

Citizen Science Skilling for Library Staff, Researchers, and the Public

cover cs4rl skilling

#CS4RL

An open access and peer-reviewed book

Section Editor Jitka Stilund Hansen

Part of the four part book series: Citizen Science for Research Libraries — A Guide

Published by the LIBER Citizen Science Working Group

© 2021 the authors. Licensed Creative Commons: Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0), unless otherwise stated.

Read online, DOI: https://doi.org/10.25815/hf0m-2a57

ISBN Print: 978-87-94233-59-0

ISBN eBook: 978-87-94233-60-6

A practical guide designed to assist those organising and participating in a citizen science project to get the most out of the experience. The guide will enable you to have the skills to ensure a project is well set up from the start, is able to communicate to its stakeholders and citizens, manage its data and outputs, and overall ensure research benefits. The guide has been compiled by the LIBER Citizen Science Working Group and pulls on the generous contributions of the open science community.

Table of contents

Subsection: Project Planning and Communications | Project Planning: A Step-by-Step Guide; Stakeholder Matrix. By Line Laursen and Thomas Kaarsted | Communication; Communication Plan (Citizens); Project Highlight: Find a Lake. By Lotte Thing Rasmussen | Subsection: Management of Citizen Science Data | Research Data Management: Quick Start Guide (eLearning course) | Use of Data Policies in Citizen Science Projects: A Step-by-step Guide. By Jitka Stilund Hansen | Citizen Science Data and Standards; Project Highlight: Defining New Data Standards with Citizen Science. By Sven Schade and Chrisa Tsinaraki | Acknowledgment of Citizen Scientists on Research Outputs; Project Highlight: Lizard Conservation with the Balanggarra Rangers in Australia. By Georgia Ward-Fear | Planning and Securing Resources — The Data Management Plan. By Iryna Kuchma | Project Highlight: FAIR Data in a Citizen Science Project | Project Highlight: The INOS Project | Subsection: Scientific Literacy | Increasing Scientific Literacy with Citizen Science. By Berit Elisabeth Alving.

Editorial

Editorial Committee: Paul Ayris (Chair), Bastian Greshake Tzovaras, Jitka Stilund Hansen, and Kirsty Wallis Co-Editors-in-Chief: Thomas Kaarsted & Simon Worthington Reviewers: Sara Decoster & Stefan Wiederkehr.

Correspondence: Simon Worthington, simon.worththington@tib.eu

Publishing process

Open Peer Review - https://github.com/cs4rl/production/blob/main/opr.md

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The citizen science guide is designed to be a practical and compact gateway publication for the purpose of assisting research libraries to start setting up a citizen science programme. #cs4rl

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