From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Horizon
is an online-only, open-access magazine covering research and innovation,
[1]
published in Brussels since 2013
[2]
by the
European Commission
. It covers a wide range of topics, including agriculture, energy, environment, frontier research, health, ICT, industry, policy, science in society, security, social sciences, space and transport.
Horizon
publishes three to five articles per week and in English only and normally covers research projects which were funded by the
European Union
(EU) through its
Framework Programmes for Research and Technological Development
, such as
FP7
and
Horizon 2020
, and through the
European Research Council
. Occasionally, Horizon also publishes policy announcements from the European Commission's
Directorate-General for Research and Innovation
.
Articles from Horizon Magazine can be republished under a license which requires simple attribution.
[3]
Horizon articles have been shared or re-published, among others, by the
European Space Agency
,
[4]
by the
University of Oxford
,
[5]
by the
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
,
[6]
by the
University of Trento
[7]
and by the Welfare State Futures Coordination Office at
Humboldt University of Berlin
[8]
and by the
BBC
's
The Naked Scientists
podcast.
[9]
Horizon is produced, on the European Commission's behalf, by ICF Next (previously ICF Mostra),
[10]
a Brussels-based communications division of
ICF
.
References
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