Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

November 2004Lars Björnshauge1 Lund University Libraries Head Office "The DOAJ, and Issues of Integration for OA Materials" Lars Björnshauge Lund.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "November 2004Lars Björnshauge1 Lund University Libraries Head Office "The DOAJ, and Issues of Integration for OA Materials" Lars Björnshauge Lund."— Presentation transcript:

1 November 2004Lars Björnshauge1 Lund University Libraries Head Office "The DOAJ, ELIN@ and Issues of Integration for OA Materials" Lars Björnshauge Lund University Libraries Sweden

2 November 2004Lars Björnshauge2 Outline of presentation 1.Introduction 2.Update on Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) 3.Integration of OA-material in digital library services – the case of the Electronic Library Information Aggregator (ELIN@) 4.Working with issues of scholarly communication – at the local and the national level

3 November 2004Lars Björnshauge3

4 November 2004Lars Björnshauge4 DOAJ Background Phase 1 – title level service Phase 2 – article level service Impact, usage, feedback Future – further development, sustainability, funding

5 November 2004Lars Björnshauge5 Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) http://www.doaj.org/ –A collection of peer reviewed open access journals –All disciplines – all languages –One interface

6 November 2004Lars Björnshauge6 Aims and goals Increase visibility and access = Increased usage = Increased citation = Increased impact = Increased usage...

7 November 2004Lars Björnshauge7 Selection criteria Agreed upon in the beginning of the project Open Access Quality control measures, the journal must exercise peer-review or editorial quality control to be included. Scientific or scholarly content

8 November 2004Lars Björnshauge8 Open Access – our definition We define open access journals as journals that use a funding model that does not charge readers or their institutions for access. From the BOAI definition of "open access" we take the right of "users to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of these articles" as mandatory for a journal to be included in the directory.

9 November 2004Lars Björnshauge9 Number of journals May 2003: 300 November 2003: 558 May 2004: 1097 September 2004: 1231 November 2004:1345

10 November 2004Lars Björnshauge10 November 2004 1345+ journals 330 titles (61.000) with article level metadata Article level metadata for OAI-harvesting available Numbers growing

11 November 2004Lars Björnshauge11

12 November 2004Lars Björnshauge12 So far … Global visibility and dissemination of records –Integrated in OPAC´s in many, many libraries –Several service providers are linking into DOAJ –Integrated in the services of aggregators (Ullrichs, Ebsco etc.) Frequently referred to as the most important listing

13 November 2004Lars Björnshauge13

14 November 2004Lars Björnshauge14

15 November 2004Lars Björnshauge15

16 November 2004Lars Björnshauge16

17 November 2004Lars Björnshauge17

18 November 2004Lars Björnshauge18

19 November 2004Lars Björnshauge19

20 November 2004Lars Björnshauge20

21 November 2004Lars Björnshauge21

22 November 2004Lars Björnshauge22 But still: Lots of work to do 100+ suggestions for ”new” journals every month Assisting publishers in creating and delivering OAI-compliant article level metadata Many ideas for improvements

23 November 2004Lars Björnshauge23 Some statements from librarians

24 November 2004Lars Björnshauge24 “Since the beginning of this program, Lund University has provided encouragement to faculty and librarians throughout the globe in providing secure and comprehensive access to important journals that are freely available world wide. DOAJ has demonstrated the growing importance of alternatives to large scale commercial publishing.” Frances Groen, Trenholme Director of Libraries, McGill University, Canada.

25 November 2004Lars Björnshauge25 The Directory of Open Access Journals is of paramount importance for the open access movement. The site demonstrates the viability of new approaches in scientific publishing and its strong growth is a source of inspiration and encouragement to all who are working at an opener access to the results of academic research. Numerous reports and important policy statements use the site as a point of reference. Leo Waijers, Library Director, University of Wanegen, Netherlands

26 November 2004Lars Björnshauge26 Where do we go from here? Network of editors Make journals aware of possibilities Personalization – MyDOAJ Hybrid Journals Sponsorship programme

27 November 2004Lars Björnshauge27 Integration of OA-material in Library & Information Services The problem: –conventional subscription based material flows seamlessly into library services –supported by publishers, subscriptionsagents, aggregators etc. –how to expose Open Access material to users??

28 November 2004Lars Björnshauge28 The bundling strategy Bundling: the strategy of the commercial ”big deal” publishers)  In terms of access and usage bundling means: 1.One database 2.One single point of access – limited to the content of one publisher 3.Visibility for low usage (low quality?) journals

29 November 2004Lars Björnshauge29 An integration strategy Integration means: 1.One database 2.One single point of access – independent of publishers 3.Visibility for smaller, not-for-profit publishers And 4.Visibility for Institutional or Subject based Repositories and Open Access journals

30 November 2004Lars Björnshauge30 ELIN@ - Electronic Library Information Navigator – a library developed interface for the integration of information resources

31 November 2004Lars Björnshauge31 ELIN@  Product neutral presentation of resources  20 000 000 records in one user interface  Integration to local user database for autentification etc.  Personalized services  Advanced administration tools for customization and electronic resource management

32 November 2004Lars Björnshauge32 ELIN@ Contents (November 2004)  +16,000 journals, whereof  + 9,000 journals with metadata (cross searchable on article level)  +20,000,000 records  Open Archives (institutional & subject specific repositories),  Databases  Recommended web-resources

33 November 2004Lars Björnshauge33 System architecture

34 November 2004Lars Björnshauge34 ELIN@ userinterface

35 November 2004Lars Björnshauge35

36 November 2004Lars Björnshauge36

37 November 2004Lars Björnshauge37

38 November 2004Lars Björnshauge38

39 November 2004Lars Björnshauge39

40 November 2004Lars Björnshauge40

41 November 2004Lars Björnshauge41

42 November 2004Lars Björnshauge42

43 November 2004Lars Björnshauge43 ELIN@ administrative module

44 November 2004Lars Björnshauge44

45 November 2004Lars Björnshauge45

46 November 2004Lars Björnshauge46

47 November 2004Lars Björnshauge47 ELIN@ A digital library tool developed by an academic library for academic libraries  A product neutral presentation of resources  20 000 000 records in one user interface  Publishers + Open Archives + Open Access Journals  Integration to local LDAP-services (user database for autentification etc.)  Personalized services – my collection etc.  Advanced administration tools for customization & e-resources management  In operation at 10 Swedish Universities, Regional Health Care Services, and Ghent University, Belgium and

48 November 2004Lars Björnshauge48 International Development Development of onsite ELIN@ in cooperation with International Network for the Availability of Scientific Publications (INASP) for institutions Facilitating easy use of digital information resources in low-bandwidth environments In operation at Law Faculties in 4 universities in Vietnam Installations underway in: –Pakistan –Uganda –Rwanda

49 November 2004Lars Björnshauge49 Implementation in Vietnam, Rwanda, Uganda and Pakistan

50 November 2004Lars Björnshauge50 The Open Access debate as vehicle for promoting the issues of Scholarly Communication and Open Access into the agenda of the university, associations, research funders etc

51 November 2004Lars Björnshauge51 How we work with scholarly communication issues  Working at  The local level – within the university  The national level  Internationally

52 November 2004Lars Björnshauge52 Working within the university  The main problem – creating awareness!  Making researchers aware  Making university decision makers aware  The pricing issues the starting point, but rapidly moving beyond that

53 November 2004Lars Björnshauge53 Lund University - recommendations Mandatory registration of all published works in the Institutional Repository (LU:research) Authors should use the model license agreement when submitting works to publishers Authors should deposit their works in the Institutional Repository Scholarly Communications and E-Publishing Advisory Board appointed by the Vice- Chancellor

54 November 2004Lars Björnshauge54 Lund University Intellectual property rights agreements: –Working group with representatives from the Law Faculty, the University Legal Department, and the Library Head Office have proposed model licenses for Lund University –http://www.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/avtal.htmlhttp://www.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/avtal.html –Retaining the right to deposit a pre- or postprint in the Institutional Repository

55 November 2004Lars Björnshauge55 www.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/avtal.html

56 November 2004Lars Björnshauge56 § 2 Author´s right to use the Article Copyright remains with the Author. This will be acknowledged by the Publisher in the copyright line. The Author retains the right to use the Article: - for research, educational or other purposes of the Author´s university/institution - mounted on a server within the Lund University´s domains (posted to free public servers of preprints and/or articles in the Author´s subject area) - in whole or in part, as the basis for further publications or spoken presentations

57 November 2004Lars Björnshauge57 http://lu-research.lub.lu.se/ Institutional repository LU res

58 November 2004Lars Björnshauge58 Working at the national level Sweden: –Swedish Resource Center for Scientific Communication –Swedish Association of Higher Education (SUHF) – SVEP – The Swedish E-Publishing Project

59 November 2004Lars Björnshauge59 Creating Awareness in universities: Swedish Resource Center for Scholarly Communication –Operated by Lund University Libraries –A cooperative network –Contributing to seminars etc. –Rich Web-site – www.sciecom.org/www.sciecom.org/ –New OA-journal: sciecom info

60 November 2004Lars Björnshauge60

61 November 2004Lars Björnshauge61 Roads for Knowledge – the need for a new strategy for universities and their libraries Report commissioned by the Association of Swedish Universities & University Colleges (SUHF) - http://www.suhf.se/pdf/Biblioteksrapporten.pdf http://www.suhf.se/pdf/Biblioteksrapporten.pdf

62 November 2004Lars Björnshauge62 Observations and recommendations: There is a need for changes in the current system for scholarly publishing The universities need to establish conditions for creating professional publishing services within universities and university colleges (BOAI 1) As of today the libraries are the natural choice for the organisation of such activities.

63 November 2004Lars Björnshauge63 SUHF will Establish a task force to look at intellectual property rights agreements Investigate the long term effects of the current system of scholarly publishing Investigate and evaluate current research assessment and merit systems and Promote alternative approaches based on university publishing and other initiatives for open access publishing

64 November 2004Lars Björnshauge64 SUHF has Appointed a task force to: –Initiate discussions with research councils/funders initiated –Draft Intellectual Property Rights agreements – retaining rights to deposit pre-/postprints on university servers etc The task force will suggest SUHF to sign the Berlin Declaration later this year - DONE

65 November 2004Lars Björnshauge65 SVEP (Electronic Publishing in Swedish Universities) Aim: –Promote and coordinate the development of electronic publishing at Swedish Universities Funded by BIBSAM (Royal Library, Sweden) Participants: –Uppsala, Gothenburg, Lund etc.

66 November 2004Lars Björnshauge66

67 November 2004Lars Björnshauge67 Thank you for your attention DOAJ: www.doaj.orgwww.doaj.org ELIN@: –http://www.lub.lu.se/headoffice/elininfo.shtmlhttp://www.lub.lu.se/headoffice/elininfo.shtml –Article in The Charleston ADVISOR, vol. 5, no. 4, 2004 lars.bjornshauge@lub.lu.se

68 November 2004Lars Björnshauge68 More links Swedish Association of Higher Education: http://www.suhf.se/ http://www.suhf.se/ SVEP – Swedish E-Publishing Project: http://www.svep-projekt.se/english/ http://www.svep-projekt.se/english/ Swedish Resource Center for Scientific Communication: http://www.sciecom.org/ http://www.sciecom.org/ License to publish – author/publisher: http://www3.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/ModellFF.pdf http://www3.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/ModellFF.pdf Publishing agreement – university/author: http://www3.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/ModellFLU.pdf http://www3.lu.se/jurenh/INTERN/ModellFLU.pdf


Download ppt "November 2004Lars Björnshauge1 Lund University Libraries Head Office "The DOAJ, and Issues of Integration for OA Materials" Lars Björnshauge Lund."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google