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Bringing the emphasis back to Open Access. Bill Hubbard RSP Autumn School, Miskin Manor 9 th November 2011. In the beginning was the Repository. Repositories were about Open Access to research results OA benefits for researchers, authors, institutions, funders, the public
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Bringing the emphasis back to Open Access Bill Hubbard RSP Autumn School, Miskin Manor 9th November 2011
In the beginning was the Repository • Repositories were about Open Access to research results • OA benefits for researchers, authors, institutions, funders, the public • Objective was to reach the tipping point • Key was to get content • Vision was Open Access to the world’s research • But then . . . .
Compromise and growth • First compromise was weak OA • When we built it, they didn’t come . . . • Content became a driver in itself • RAE horse and the IR cart • TARDIS and add the full-text later . . . • What happens when a researcher finds “access denied” from an Open Access repository?
Institutional integration • Links to RPD, RAE, staff information pages, staff web pages, departmental web pages, research management systems, virtual learning environments, eTheses collection, etc • Does integration mean a loss of identity? • Does that matter if goals are achieved? • Does integration bring a loss of focus?
Too many goals for too few resources? • Open Access eTheses • Open Data • Open Educational Resources • Grey literature • Open Peer Review, Web2.0, Open Science • Open Access Journals advocacy and support • Open Access Journals on campus start-up
Too many goals . . . #2 • RAE and now REF • CRIS and research management • Staff data records and management • Funders’ policy compliance • Institutional mandate compliance • Metadata enhancement • Dare I say . . . Preservation?
Multiplicity of goals • Reflection of maturity or of adolescence? • What has happened to Open Access to research? • What is our priority? Or has it become individual priorities within each institution? • Do our advocacy messages match our priorities? Does a mismatch cause any problems?
Infrastructure is in place . . . • Repositories • 2132 worldwide, 201 UK-based • Journals • 7288 journals worldwide - plus hybrids • Funder policies • Publications: 55 - Data: 25 - Journals: 22 • Institutional policies • 135 policies reported, plus etheses • Services and processes • source: OpenDOAR, DOAJ, JULIET, ROARMAP, 09/11/11
What is available? • Is your repository full-text only or do you also accept metadata only records? • Full-text only 18 24% • Metadata only and full-text 56 76% • TOTAL responses 74 • Percentage full-text in repositories: • Average across all institutions 57% • What percentage of output is Open Access? Source - RSP Wiki Summary: http://www.rsp.ac.uk/pmwiki/index.php?n=Institutions.Summary
IR USP • Do repositories get lost among other services?
Mendeley 1,319,469 People 112,949 Groups 30,529 Institutions 129,692,213 Papers
IR USP • Infrastructure is in place and links have been made . . . time to reclaim an identity around Open Access to research? • Could be as OA service cf OA repository • Strong vs Weak OA - use rights • “Moral” argument gets traction with academics • Can CRIS systems help in this? • CRIS as bib records, IR as full-text OA
CRIS + Repositories at UK Universities • Lancaster Pure + EPrints • Leeds Met Symplectic + intraLibrary • Leeds Symplectic + EPrints • Leicester Symplectic + DSpace • Oxford Symplectic + Fedora • Plymouth: Symplectic + DSpace • Queen Mary Symplectic + DSpace • Ryl Holloway Pure + Equella • Sheffield Symplectic + EPrints • St Andrews Pure + DSpace • Stirling Converis + DSpace • Strathclyde Pure + EPrints • Surrey Symplectic + Eprints • UCL Symplectic + Eprints • York Pure + EPrints Source - modified from Google Doc: http://bit.ly/v6A6TJ • Aberdeen Pure + DSpace • Bournemouth Symplectic + EPrints • Brighton Converis + EPrints • Brunel Symplectic + DSpace • Cambridge Symplectic + DSpace • City U London: Symplectic + EPrints • Cranfield Converis +DSpace • Dundee Pure + DSpace • Edinburgh Pure + DSpace • Exeter Symplectic + DSpace • Glasgow Cldn Pure + Digital Commons • Glasgow Bespoke + EPrints • Heriot-Watts Pure + DSpace • Hertfordshire Pure + DSpace • Hull Converis + Fedora • Imperial Symplectic + DSpace • Keele Symplectic + intraLibrary
. . . to conclude . . . • Do you feel a loss of focus with the repository? • Does Open Access to research papers as an aim still resonate with you, with colleagues? • Would there be a benefit to re-evaluation and re-focussing? • Jackie’s session may address these ideas - for now, can CRIS bring the emphasis back to Open Access?
Bill Hubbard bill.hubbard@nottingham.ac.uk