Monday 16 August 2010

Depositing for beginners... (journal articles)

A simple guide to what to think about when depositing in QMRO:


  1. the repository is open access, nothing confidential please
  2. if you are not sure which version of your item can be made public in the repository, speak to a member of the team: QMRO repository team
  3. when uploading, make sure you grant rights by clicking on the link in PubLists 
  4. we want to be able to make as much of your research output available as possible 
    • if we cannot deposit the version you initially supply we will contact you for a suitable alternative if copyright permits
    • please be prepared to supply an alternative version by keeping working and original submission versions
  5. Versions:
    • pre-print - the one you submitted to the publisher initially
    • post-print - the one they supplied back to you after refereeing
    • publisher PDF - the one that got published with all the publisher's formatting

No two publishers have the same policy when it comes to open access, and some have different policies for different journal titles, so please be patient we want to get your submitted content public as soon as possible but sometimes this might take a little bit of time to sort out.

Thursday 12 August 2010

JISC Reports on Open Access

JISC published a report of research: Modelling Scholarly Communication Options: costs and benefits for universities carried out for them by Alma Swan from Key Perspectives.  The accompanying How to guide: How to build a case for university policies and practices in support of Open Access and briefing paper Publishing Research Papers: which policies will deliver best value for your university? may be very useful for senior executive or governing bodies of institutions considering moving towards a more comprehensive Open Access model for research publication.



An ever-growing backlog

Whilst the repository staff beaver away, attempting to work through some of the backlog of new deposits to the repository, all I can focus on is the fact that we have a backlog in the first place.  It is very comforting to know that there are some early adopters out there, willing and ready to get content into the repository and offer us an opportunity to go public with something substantial.

The barriers to going public are almost resolved, and hopefully this means the repository should be available in the coming weeks.

In the meantime, keep that content coming!

Monday 9 August 2010

Repositories and publications blog

Welcome to the Repositories and Publications blog!

Aimed at helping academics and researchers find their way through the minefields that are Open Access archiving, Institutional Repositories and Research Publications Management.

I'm hoping to build a corpus of information, useful links and special events to help myself keep track of what's happening and what's useful.  So, comments, suggestions and recommendations readily accepted.  If you find it useful for Scholarly Communication, then I want to know about it.

Are we there yet?

You start with an ideal... and then you wait.  And if you're really unlucky, you wait a bit more.  If you're a bit impatient, like me, waiting for someone to give you the green light can seem interminable. 

There's a reason the phrase, 'so close yet so far' is a favourite of mine.  It feels like we've been 'almost there' for so long that we might never actually arrive.

There are complex and often time-consuming decisions to make regarding a repository, talk to someone in the repository community and you'll hear them often, talk to someone else and they will have no idea what you're going on about.  Is that part of the problem?  We talk about making research public, about communication and dissemination, but are we as a community becoming so insular that we are part of the problem? 

Here at least we are finally so near arriving that it's tangible.  This thing that I've been working towards for so long is finally here.  But what then?  A new phase, a new stage of the journey, and more development.  See, having a live public repository is only the beginning, the journey is endless and there are still more exciting adventures out there...