New Zealand

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Homepage
http://www.creativecommons.org.nz/
Other URLs
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ccanz/
Status
Active
Most Recent License Version
3.0
Affiliated Institution
Royal Society of New Zealand (governmental body)
Public Affiliate
Jane Hornibrook
EMail
janehornibrook@gmail.com
Region
Asia-Pacific
Country Code
nz
Flag
http://creativecommons.org/images/international/nz.png

Jurisdiction: Creative Commons Aotearoa New Zealand

Date submitted: January 2011 (for an older versions of this Roadmap see 'page history' or a document version)

Roadmap

Description

We are the kaitiaki of the New Zealand CC licences that enable the voluntary sharing of copyright material in Aotearoa. We're a kiwi remix on an international movement toward open access licensing and are here to support Creative Commons in New Zealand.

Priorities

Priorities for 2011

- Updating our web presence

- Updating our promotional tools

- Promoting CC in the context of NZGOAL

- Maintaining ties with the education sector

- Providing opportunities for our community to meet

Deliverables (6 month forecast)

It continues to be CCANZ's aim in 2011 to partner with other institutions and sector groups in order to create awareness and promote CC more effectively to more communities. The following list sets out some collaborative efforts planned for the near future.

The people from CCANZ (Public Lead, Legal Team, Advisory Panel Members, volunteers or RSNZ) who will we know so far will be involved in each activity are bracketed.


Web resources

Jurisdiction website

We are rebuilding our jurisdiction website on WordPress. The new version will make it easier for us to publish documents and communicate information clearly. (Joshua Gross [RSNZ] and Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])

Website and social media content

Along with our social media channels (Twitter and Flickr) we aim to keep the website up to date with news and events, and provide at least seven more 'Featured Commoners' (which are interviews or case studies) by September. (Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])


Promotional tools

We will be producing some clear print promotional materials and will explore the possibility of creating some animated video resources. (Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])


Metrics

The Public Lead should have completed an up-to-date licence uptake report by mid February 2011. The report summarises general licence user trends and feedback, and uses Google search in conjunction with the CC Licence Monitor to vaguely map licence uptake in New Zealand. (Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])


Meeting the community

Individual sectors are given opportunities to meet and discuss Creative Commons face to face, but an open space for the general public is also essential from time to time. CCANZ will facilitate an official open catchup or salon for the public. (Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])


Workshops and Presentations

State Agencies and NZGOAL

The State Services Commission facilitated workshops for State Agencies on the New Zealand Government Open Access and Licensing framework in late 2010. CCANZ will contribute to any ongoing workshops and document main discussion points. CCANZ will speak the Smart Government New Zealand 2011 conference in March. (Keitha Booth [Advisory Panel] Richard Best [Legal Team] and Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])

People in Your Neighbourhood

This British Council New Zealand program explores and celebrates New Zealand's urban multicultural artistic talent, and is all based on CC principals. CCANZ had been involved in the project since 2009 but will step up its promotional activities and work with PIYN more closely to document experiences and outputs via our networks. (Helen Baxter [Advisory Panel] and Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])

Local CC lectures

CCANZ will offer a speaker to take a relevant one-off CC class at local tertiary institutions. (Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])

CC and Education

CCANZ has worked with the Ministry of Education and WikiEducator to provide some workshops for schools and will also be working more closely with WikiEducator and the Open Education Resource Foundation to offer support in projects - such as their new collaboration with the Open Courseware Consortium to create resources for open content licensing in education. (Wayne Mackintosh [Advisory Panel] Jane Hornibrook [Public Lead])

Indigenous knowledge workshops

In 2008, Professor Susy Frankel from the CCANZ Legal Team and Huhana Rokx from the Council for the Humanities facilitated some discussion meetings on Māori knowledge and how it relates to the application of CC licences. It was proposed at the time that a workshop would be held to explore the matter after relevant processes within the Waitangi Tribunal had played out. Plans for such a workshop will possibly be resumed in 2011 at Susy's discretion, although it is also possible for us to contribute to this thread by facilitating Māori translations of some basic CC resources. (Susy Frankel [Legal Team] and Aroha Meed [Advisory Panel])

Community

Most of the Creative Commons stakeholders and community groups in New Zealand could be categorised under the following:

Government. Agencies and staff who advocate for ‘open government’ and the principles of open access in public sector information.

Education. Institutions and projects promoting E-Learning and open educational resources.

Creators and/or self publishers. Professional and non-professional creators who use open access as part of new business models and/or believe in free culture as a motivating cause.

Private business. On and offline businesses who utilise open access as part of their strategic operation.

Cultural institutions. Community spaces and archives who see the benefits of open access for the management of material and the greater good of the community.

Māori knowledge communities. Those vested in the study of and advocacy for Mātauranga Māori.

Learned societies, Research Organisations, Think Tanks and Professional Bodies. Such as Crown Research Institutes and Societies who see open access licensing as a stimulus to innovation.

Social commentators. Those maintaining that open access and shared culture benefits benefit our society as a whole in many ways.

We try to strengthen ties with these communities by pulling in people from diverse areas on our Panel, and by collaborating with other projects. We have an online CC community on our website which you can view here.

Project Composition

CCANZ Legal Team

Richard Best, Department of Internal Affairs

Professor Susy Frankel, Victoria University of Wellington

Andrew Matangi, Buddle Findlay

Paul Sumpter, University of Auckland


CCANZ Public Lead

Jane Hornibrook


RSNZ Manager

Don Smith


CCANZ Advisory Panel

Penny Carnaby, Former National Librarian (Chair)

Helen Baxter, Mohawk Media

Keitha Booth, State Services Commission

Colin Jackson, IT consultant

Fabiana Kubke, University of Auckland

Professor Brian Fitzgerald, Queensland University of Technology

Dr Wayne Macintosh, Open Education Resource Foundation

Aroha Meed, Victoria Management School

Stephanie Pietkiewicz, True Story


CCANZ volunteers

Danyl Strype

Sustainability

The Royal Society of New Zealand maintains a contract with the Ministry for Research Science and Technology to facilitate an environment where Creative Commons can achieve its aims in exchange for a three-year funding grant from 2010–2013. We will be looking at ways the ensure some sustainability both during and after this period.

Regional Collaboration

We're part of a fabulous jurisdiction group in the Asia Pacific region and recently enjoyed a CC Asia Pacific conference hosted by CC Korea. There is a regional newsletter.

CCANZ is very indebted to CC Australia for their assistance over the years, and for contributing their knowledge on our inaugural Advisory Panel.

Panel Meeting Documents

August 2010

Agenda .pdf and .odt

Minutes .pdf and .odt

History of CCANZ .pdf and .odt

CCANZ Structure .pdf and .odt

December 2010

Agenda .pdf and .odt

Minutes .pdf and .odt

Update from Public Lead .pdf and .odt

Roadmap and suggested additions .pdf and .odt