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Bill Hubbard SHERPA Manager University of Nottingham

ALPSP Seminar “Preprint and Postprint Repositories” Institutional Repositories: The Repository Landscape. Bill Hubbard SHERPA Manager University of Nottingham. SHERPA -. Securing a Hybrid Environment for Research Preservation and Access Partner institutions

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Bill Hubbard SHERPA Manager University of Nottingham

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  1. ALPSP Seminar “Preprint and Postprint Repositories”Institutional Repositories: The Repository Landscape Bill Hubbard SHERPA Manager University of Nottingham

  2. SHERPA - • Securing a Hybrid Environment for Research Preservation and Access • Partner institutions • Birkbeck College, Birmingham, Bristol, Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Imperial College, Kings College, Leeds, LSE, Newcastle, Nottingham, Oxford, Royal Holloway, School of Oriental and African Studies, Sheffield, University College London,York; the British Library and AHDS • www.sherpa.ac.uk

  3. SHERPA - projects • SHERPA • SHERPA Plus • OpenDOAR • SHERPA/RoMEO • SHERPA DP • EThOS • Institutional Repository Statistics (IRS) • MIDESS, IRIS, VERSIONS, SPECTRa and StORe

  4. UK Institutional Repositories • AHDS S • Bath • Birkbeck S • Birmingham S • Bristol S • British Library S • Cambridge S • CCLRC • Cranfield • Durham S • Edinburgh S • Glasgow S • Imperial S • Lancaster • Leeds S • LSE S • Kings College S • Newcastle S • Nottingham S • Open University • Oxford S • Royal Holloway S • Sheffield S • St Andrews • SOAS S • Southampton • Stirling • Surrey • UCL S • York S • Warwick

  5. 1994 Group • University of Bath • University of Durham • University of East Anglia • University of Essex • University of Surrey • University of Exeter • Lancaster University • Birkbeck University of London • Goldsmiths • LSE • Royal Holloway • University of Reading • University of St Andrews • University of Sussex • University of Warwick • University of York • 68% operational repositories or active repository programmes

  6. Russell Group • University of Birmingham • University of Bristol • University of Cambridge • Cardiff University • University of Edinburgh • University of Glasgow • Imperial College • King's College London • University of Leeds • University of Liverpool • LSE • University of Manchester • University of Newcastle • University of Nottingham • University of Oxford • University of Sheffield • University of Southampton • University of Warwick • University College London • 16 out of 19 operational • 2 more in pilot . . .

  7. UKCORR- UK Council Of Research Repositories • Arts and Humanties Data Service • University of Bath • Birkbeck College • University of Birmingham • University of Bristol • British Library • University of Cambridge • University of Chester • De Montfort University • University of Durham • University of Edinburgh • University of Glasgow • Imperial College • Kings College • University of Leeds • University of Liverpool • Liverpool John Moores • London School of Economics • University of Newcastle • University of Nottingham • Open University • University of Portsmouth • Royal Holloway • School of Oriental and African Studies • University of Sheffield • University of Southampton • University of Stirling • University of Strathclyde • University College, London • University of York

  8. Repositories - worldwide • Greece - 2 • Hungary - 4 • India - 13 • Ireland - 2 • Israel - 1 • Italy - 20 • Japan - 6 • Mexico - 5 • Namibia - 1 • Netherlands - 17 • New Zealand - 1 • Norway - 2 • Pakistan - 1 • Peru - 1 • Portugal - 4 • Russian Federation - 2 • Singapore - 2 • Slovenia - 1 • South Africa - 4 • Spain - 9 • Sweden - 14 • Switzerland - 4 • Taiwan - 1 • Turkey - 1 • United Kingdom - 57 • USA - 153 • Argentina - 1 • Australia - 19 • Austria - 3 • Belgium - 8 • Brazil - 30 • Canada - 31 • Chile - 2 • China - 5 • Columbia - 3 • Costa Rica - 1 • Denmark - 6 • Finland - 4 • France - 25 • Germany - 53

  9. Repositories are spreading because . . . • Give easy access • Give rapid access • Give long-term access • Increase readership and use of material • They offer advantages to academics • They offer advantages to institutions • They offer advantages to research funders • They offer new ways for information to be linked and used

  10. National development • Research-led universities adopting research repositories • extension with eTheses, data-sets, multimedia, etc • Policies for development • from research funders • from institutions • from departments • National perspective for services • of repositories, repository holdings • for search and analysis of contents • for UK research on the global stage

  11. Repository content • Theses • Dissertations • Royalty publications • Conference papers • Conference organisation • Grey literature • Preprints • Postprints • Datasets • Learning objects • Videos • Sound files • linkage between these objects

  12. Repository use • Access to material • Citation analysis • Overlay journals • Review projects • Evidence based work • Data-mining • Cross-institutional research group virtual research environments • RAE-like submissions, activities and management • Archival storage • “Shop-windows” • Facilitate industrial links • Career-long personalised work spaces

  13. Search • Google • Google Scholar • MSN Search • Yahoo • Various commercial services and initiatives • Oaister • ePrints.UK • EEVL Xtra • DART for European eTheses • EThOS for UK eTheses

  14. Futures • 10 years - what changes are coming down the track and what responses are needed? • What is inside your control and what is outside? • Irrespective of repositories, author-side charges, open access - what will develop? • Developments in the web and ICT alone will produce substantial change . . . • Some themes . . .

  15. Journals • Governments will not loosen the purse strings • Subscriptions per journal will continue to decline • Continued agglomeration of publishing concerns • Smaller publishers will continue to be squeezed and have to react • The big and the nimble will survive • Editorial and peer-review process will be technologically mediated • Unbundling of products, processes and services - with a global marketplace for service provision

  16. Academics and IT • Increasing connectivity • Increasing demand for rapid, permanent access, everywhere • Increasing demand for more information • Increasing demand for free access • Information per se will be more freely available and the links between information will become the valued commodity

  17. Research • Full Economic Costing and Value For Money • Public awareness and availability • Raised awareness of IPR issues • Institutions being pressured to capitalise on their assets • Cross-disciplinary research • Synthesis - evidence based research - data mining • Emergence of global standards - quality control? - with a global marketplace for service provision

  18. What will happen? • Who knows? But whatever happens - • If definitive versions are of value to research work (and they are) • then they will be used • If journals are of value to research work (and they are) • then they will be used • If publishers are of value to research work (and they are) • then they will be used • If learned societies are of value to research work (and they are) • then they will be used • If repositories of work are of value to research work (and they are) • then they will be used

  19. http://www.sherpa.ac.ukhttp://www.opendoar.orgbill.hubbard@nottingham.ac.ukhttp://www.sherpa.ac.ukhttp://www.opendoar.orgbill.hubbard@nottingham.ac.uk

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