diff --git a/content/OS-developing-world/OS-developing-world.md b/content/OS-developing-world/OS-developing-world.md
index e4bd8508d6..24b532675b 100644
--- a/content/OS-developing-world/OS-developing-world.md
+++ b/content/OS-developing-world/OS-developing-world.md
@@ -56,62 +56,16 @@ subtitle = "A Collection of Practical Guides"
-## What is this project?
+## The what, how, and why of Open Science in the Developing World
---------------------
-**Open Science in the Developing World** is a completed, large-scale international collaboration led and supported by FORRT that culminated in a peer-reviewed publication in *Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science* (AMPPS).
+**Open Science in the Developing World** is a completed, large-scale international collaboration by 49 open scientists from 12 developing countries, led and supported by FORRT members, that culminated in several community resources (see below) and a peer-reviewed publication in the journal *Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science* (AMPPS), entitled ["Open Science in the Developing World: A Collection of Practical Guides for Researchers in Developing Countries."](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565) See our postprint [here](http://osf.io/7ubk2).
-The project responds to a central tension in the open science movement:
-while open science is often presented as *universally beneficial*, its dominant tools, incentives, and norms have largely been designed by and for researchers in well-resourced, Global North contexts.
+The project responds to a central tension in the open science movement:
-This initiative reframes open science as something that must be **context-sensitive, adaptable, and equity-oriented**, particularly for researchers working in developing countries and other resource-constrained environments.
-
-****Contributors****
-
-- 49 contributors will cover Open Science related topic from perspective of 12 developing countries.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-#### Progress
----------------------
-
-- [x] Open call for contributors.
-
-- [x] Identified topic leads.
-
-- [x] Drafts for each topic.
-
-- [x] First draft of the whole paper.
-
-- [x] Re-structure the first draft of the whole paper.
-
-- [x] Final preprint of the paper is available [here](http://osf.io/7ubk2).
-
-- [x] Final Publication is available [here](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565).
-
-
-
-
-### Key Publications (2025)
-
-The **preprint** can [be found here (osf.io/7ubk2)](http://osf.io/7ubk2), and final **publication**: [here](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565).
-
-Download the supplementary material [here](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/suppl/10.1177/25152459251357565/suppl_file/sj-docx-1-amp-10.1177_25152459251357565.docx?_gl=1*qdrt5e*_up*MQ..*_ga*MzI4ODQ0MDI1LjE3NjY0ODg2NjU.*_ga_60R758KFDG*czE3NjY0ODg2NjUkbzEkZzAkdDE3NjY0ODg2NjUkajYwJGwwJGgxOTI0NTEyNTAw).
-
-
-> Hu, C.-P., Xu, Z., Lazić, A., Bhattacharya, P., Seda, L., Hossain, S., Jeftić, A., Özdoğru, A. A., Amaral, O. B., Miljković, N., Ilchovska, Z. G., Lazarevic, L. B., Wu, H., Bao, S., Ghodke, N., Moreau, D., Elsherif, M., C., C., Ghai, S., ... Azevedo, F. (2025). **Open Science in the Developing World: A Collection of Practical Guides for Researchers in Developing Countries.** *Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science*, *8*(3), 25152459251357565. [https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565)
+> while open science is often presented as *universally beneficial*, its dominant tools, incentives, and norms have largely been designed by and for researchers in well-resourced, Global North contexts.
+This **Open Science in the Developing World** initiative reframes open science as something that must be **context-sensitive, adaptable, and equity-oriented**, particularly for researchers working in developing countries and other resource-constrained environments.
### What does the paper do?
@@ -127,6 +81,10 @@ It explicitly acknowledges structural barriers such as:
and responds with **concrete strategies that researchers can adopt immediately**, without requiring institutional privilege or substantial financial resources.
+
+
+**Fig. 1.** A schematic representation of the nested and interconnected structure of barriers for engaging in open science in developing countries. The top layer describes the three aspects of engaging in open science: accessibility to open resources, accessible resources to be able to contribute to open science, and opportunities to exercise leadership and to be a leader. The middle layer includes micro-level barriers that directly and specifically slow down engagement in open science. The bottom layer includes macro-level barriers that constrain science in general. The dashed line means the indirect constraints, and the solid line means direct constraints; different colors are used for the lines to enhance visibility.
+
### The Four-Level Engagement Framework
@@ -156,6 +114,17 @@ Building and leading **local or regional open-science communities**, shaping nor
This structure explicitly rejects a “one-size-fits-all” model of open science and emphasizes **agency, sustainability, and local relevance**.
+
+
+**Fig. 2.** Practical guide for engaging in and contributing to open science as researchers from developing countries. Researchers start with using open resources and building a solid foundation, gradually grow and adopt recommended practices according to their own pace and context, contribute to the community in various ways, and finally, become leaders in the open-science movement.
+
+
+
+
+**Fig. 3.** The hidden costs of “best open-science practices” for researchers in developing countries. FORRT = the Framework for Open and Reproducible Research Training; COSN = the Chinese Open Science Network; APC = article-processing cost; OA = open access.
+
+This figure synthesizes how individual actions scale into collective impact through community-led open science initiatives. It highlights the role of grassroots networks, shared infrastructure, and inclusive governance in transforming open science from a set of technical practices into a sustainable research culture. The figure reinforces the paper’s central argument that leadership in open science can emerge from diverse global contexts when supported by accessible tools and communities.
+
### Educational & Practical Resources
@@ -177,6 +146,38 @@ These materials are designed for:
They align closely with FORRT’s broader mission to **democratize access to research training and epistemic participation**.
+### Community and Organizational Exemplars
+
+To illustrate how the four-level engagement framework operates in practice, the paper highlights several community-driven organizations and networks that have successfully adapted open science practices to resource-limited and non-Western contexts. These examples are **illustrative rather than exhaustive**, demonstrating diverse pathways through which researchers can engage with, contribute to, and lead open science initiatives.
+
+Importantly, these organizations differ in scale, disciplinary focus, governance models, and regional scope—but share a commitment to accessibility, capacity building, and contextual sensitivity.
+
+#### Grassroots and Regional Open Science Networks
+
+- **COSN**
+ A researcher-led initiative advancing open science training, infrastructure, and community-building in China. COSN demonstrates how open science can be meaningfully localized through language accessibility, culturally relevant training, and institutional engagement.
+
+- **OSCS**
+ A national grassroots network promoting open research practices through workshops, repositories, and policy engagement. OSCS illustrates how sustained community organizing can translate open science principles into national-level infrastructures.
+
+- **BrRN**
+ A multidisciplinary network inspired by reproducibility initiatives but adapted to the Brazilian research ecosystem. BrRN highlights the role of coordinated national networks in linking grassroots efforts with institutional and policy reform.
+
+#### Inclusion-Focused and Transnational Initiatives
+
+ An international consortium addressing barriers faced by researchers from developing countries in big-team and open-science collaborations. ABRIR foregrounds issues of representation, onboarding, credit, and leadership in large-scale research.
+
+- **FORRT**
+ A global, community-driven initiative focused on open science education, training, and metascience. Within the context of this project, FORRT served as a coordination hub, dissemination platform, and educational infrastructure supporting inclusive engagement with open science practices.
+
+#### Why these examples matter
+
+Together, these organizations demonstrate that:
+- Open science can be advanced **without reliance on elite institutions or high-cost infrastructures**
+- Community-led models are critical for **capacity building, sustainability, and local ownership**
+- Leadership in open science can and does emerge from the Global South and other resource-constrained settings
+
+These exemplars reinforce the paper’s central argument: **open science becomes more robust, equitable, and globally relevant when it is shaped by diverse communities rather than exported as a fixed model**.
### Why this matters for FORRT
@@ -196,6 +197,42 @@ The paper also directly informs FORRT’s ongoing work on:
- community-led governance models
+****Contributors****
+
+- 49 contributors will cover Open Science related topic from perspective of 12 developing countries.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+#### How we did it?
+---------------------
+
+- [x] Open call for contributors.
+
+- [x] Identified topic leads.
+
+- [x] Drafts for each topic.
+
+- [x] First draft of the whole paper.
+
+- [x] Re-structure the first draft of the whole paper.
+
+- [x] Final preprint of the paper is available [here](http://osf.io/7ubk2).
+
+- [x] Final Publication is available [here](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565).
+
+
+
### Conference Presentations
---
@@ -208,12 +245,15 @@ The paper also directly informs FORRT’s ongoing work on:
- **2023-10-23** | Big Team Science Conference 2023 (online) | **Featured Panel #24**. See program [here](https://bigteamscienceconference.github.io/program/).
-### Learn more & get involved
-- Publication: https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565
-- Preprint & materials: https://osf.io/7ubk2
-- FORRT: https://forrt.org
-- FORRT Educational Nexus: https://forrt.org/nexus/
+## Peer-reviewed Publication
+
+The open access **publication** can be found [here](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565), and the **postprint** can [be found here (osf.io/7ubk2)](http://osf.io/7ubk2). Download the supplementary material [here](https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/suppl/10.1177/25152459251357565/suppl_file/sj-docx-1-amp-10.1177_25152459251357565.docx?_gl=1*qdrt5e*_up*MQ..*_ga*MzI4ODQ0MDI1LjE3NjY0ODg2NjU.*_ga_60R758KFDG*czE3NjY0ODg2NjUkbzEkZzAkdDE3NjY0ODg2NjUkajYwJGwwJGgxOTI0NTEyNTAw).
+
+> Hu, C.-P., Xu, Z., Lazić, A., Bhattacharya, P., Seda, L., Hossain, S., Jeftić, A., Özdoğru, A. A., Amaral, O. B., Miljković, N., Ilchovska, Z. G., Lazarevic, L. B., Wu, H., Bao, S., Ghodke, N., Moreau, D., Elsherif, M., C., C., Ghai, S., ... Azevedo, F. (2025). **Open Science in the Developing World: A Collection of Practical Guides for Researchers in Developing Countries.** *Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science*, *8*(3), 25152459251357565. [https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565](https://doi.org/10.1177/25152459251357565)
+
+
+### Learn more & get involved
If you are interested in adapting, translating, teaching, or extending these materials in your own context, we invite you to connect with the FORRT community.
@@ -221,4 +261,4 @@ If you are interested in adapting, translating, teaching, or extending these mat
## Contact Us
----------
-For more information, please contact Dr. Hu Chuan-Peng (hcp4715@hotmail.com), School of Psychology, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, China and info@forrt.org.
+Please contact Dr. Hu Chuan-Peng (hcp4715@hotmail.com), School of Psychology, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, China and Flavio Azevedo (info@forrt.org).
diff --git a/content/OS-developing-world/Practical_Guides_for_Implementing_Open_Science.webp b/content/OS-developing-world/Practical_Guides_for_Implementing_Open_Science.webp
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..6f49855272
Binary files /dev/null and b/content/OS-developing-world/Practical_Guides_for_Implementing_Open_Science.webp differ
diff --git a/content/OS-developing-world/The_hidden_costs_of_best_open-science_practices.webp b/content/OS-developing-world/The_hidden_costs_of_best_open-science_practices.webp
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..4eb9f8481c
Binary files /dev/null and b/content/OS-developing-world/The_hidden_costs_of_best_open-science_practices.webp differ
diff --git a/content/OS-developing-world/barriers_for_engaging_in_open_science_in_developing_countries.webp b/content/OS-developing-world/barriers_for_engaging_in_open_science_in_developing_countries.webp
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..539923d1c9
Binary files /dev/null and b/content/OS-developing-world/barriers_for_engaging_in_open_science_in_developing_countries.webp differ