SHared Access Research Ecosystem (SHARE) Proposal
The Association of American Universities (AAU), the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU), and ARL have drafted a proposal in response to the OSTP memo: The SHared Access Research Ecosystem (SHARE).
share-proposal-07june13.pdf
The proposal begins:
Research universities are long-lived and are mission-driven to generate, make accessible, and preserve over time new knowledge and understanding. Research universities collectively have the assets needed for a national solution for enhanced public access to federally funded research output. As the principal producers of the resources that are to be made publicly available under the new White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP)[1] memorandum, and that are critical to the continuing success of higher education in the United States, universities have invested in the infrastructure, tools, and services necessary to provide effective and efficient access to their research and scholarship. The new White House directive provides a compelling reason to integrate higher education’s investments to date into a system of cross-institutional digital repositories that will be known as SHared Access Research Ecosystem (SHARE)...
Comments and questions about the draft SHARE proposal (PDF) are welcome—please send e-mail to
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Terms:2013, Access to Federally Funded Research, Data Curation, Data Management, Data Policies, Open Access, Open Data, Open Scholarship, Public Access Policies, Publications, Publishing Models, Report, Repositories, Scholarly Communication, Text
Research Library Issues, no. 262 (Feb. 2009)
RLI issue 262 includes the following articles:
- The University's Role in the Dissemination of Research and Scholarship: A Call to Action
- ARL Statement to Scholarly Publishers on the Global Economic Crisis
- Reinventing Science Librarianship: Themes from the ARL-CNI Forum
- ARL Statistics: Redefining Serial Counts and Remaining Relevant in the 21st Century
Terms:2005–2009, Assessment, E-Research, E-Science, E-Science, E-Science, E-Science, Publications, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Research Library Issues, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Text
Membership Meeting 2009 (Fall): Options for Research Library Support of Small Publisher Operations
Presented at the 155th ARL Membership Meeting, October 2009. mm09fall-lutherivins.pps
Terms:2005–2009, 2005–2009, 2005–2009, ARL Membership Meeting, ARL Membership Meeting, ARL Membership Meeting, ARL Membership Meeting, Judy Luther, Judy Luther, Judy Luther, Judy Luther, October Ivins, October Ivins, October Ivins, October Ivins, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Publications, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Slide, Slide, Slide, Slide, Slide, Slide, Slide, University Publishing, University Publishing, University Publishing, University Publishing
Membership Meeting 2009 (Fall): Options for Research Library Support of Small Publisher Operations
Presented at the 155th ARL Membership Meeting, October 2009. mm09fall-ivins-luther.mp3
Terms:2005–2009, 2005–2009, 2005–2009, ARL Membership Meeting, ARL Membership Meeting, ARL Membership Meeting, ARL Membership Meeting, Audio , Audio , Judy Luther, Judy Luther, Judy Luther, Judy Luther, October Ivins, October Ivins, October Ivins, October Ivins, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Proceedings, Publications, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, University Publishing, University Publishing, University Publishing, University Publishing
Research Library Issues, no. 266 (Oct. 2009)
RLI issue 266 includes:
- Removing All Restrictions Cornell’s New Policy on Use of Public Domain Reproductions
- Evolving Preservation Roles and Responsibilities of Research Libraries
- SPARC Explores Income Models for Supporting Open-Access Journals
- ARL Salary Survey Highlights
Scholarly Journals at the Crossroads: A Subversive Proposal for Electronic Publishing
This s a traditional print publication, freezing in time a series of fleeting e-mail messages that envision a future of publishing that goes well beyond print. We have heard many sanguine predictions about the demise of paper publishing, but life is short and the inevitable day still seems a long way off. This is a subversive proposal that could radically hasten that day. It is applicable only to ESOTERIC (non-trade, no-market) scientific and scholarly publication (but that is the lion's share of the academic corpus anyway), namely, that body of work for which the author does not and never has expected to SELL the words. The scholarly author wants only to PUBLISH them, that is, to reach the eyes and minds of peers, fellow esoteric scientists and scholars the world over, so that they can build on one another's contributions in that cumulative. collaborative enterprise called learned inquiry.
Scholarly Journals at the Crossroads: A Subversive Proposal for Electronic Publishing
Terms:1995–1999, 1995–1999, 1995–1999, 1995–1999, Ann Shumelda Okerson, Ann Shumelda Okerson, Ann Shumelda Okerson, Ann Shumelda Okerson, James J. O'Donnell, James J. O'Donnell, James J. O'Donnell, James J. O'Donnell, Monograph, Monograph, Monograph, Monograph, Publications, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Publishing Models, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Text, Text, Text, Text, Text, Text, Text
In Oldenburg's Long Shadow
Jean-Claude Guédon • 2001 • ISBN 0-918006-81-3 • 70 pp.
Dr. Guédon made a presentation on these ideas in May 2001 at ARL's 138th Membership Meeting, a meeting held in conjunction with the Canadian Association of Research Libraries in Toronto. The presentation was received very positively and, Dr. Guédon agreed to write a paper to encourage further discussion. The result is the paper in hand. In Oldenburg’s Long Shadow is published by ARL with permission of the author in order to stimulate further discussion and new thinking on the important issues that he raises.
in-oldenburgs-long-shadow.pdf
Print copies are also available for $15.00 plus shipping & handling.
Principles for Emerging Systems of Scholarly Publishing (a.k.a. the Tempe Principles)
The "Tempe Principles" were agreed to by the undersigned individuals as a result of a meeting held in Tempe, Arizona, on March 2-4, 2000. Sponsored by the Association of American Universities, the Association of Research Libraries, and the Merrill Advanced Studies Center of the University of Kansas, the meeting was held to facilitate discussion among the various academic stakeholders in the scholarly publishing process and to build consensus on a set of principles that could guide the transformation of the scholarly publishing system.
tempe-principles-10may10.pdf
Terms:2000–2004, 2000–2004, 2000–2004, 2000–2004, New Models, New Models, New Models, New Models, Publications, Publishing Models, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Scholarly Communication, Statement, Statement, Statement, Statement, Text, Text, Text, Text, Text, Text, Text
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