OCLC Systems & Services: International digital library perspectives: Volume 23 Issue 2
Table of contents
ERMS implementation: navigating the wilderness
Norm MedeirosThe purpose of this paper is to describe important considerations for commercial ERMS implementers.
Herding cats: Designing DigitalCommons @ The Texas Medical Center, a multi‐institutional repository
Leah Krevit, Linda CraysThe purpose of this paper is to examine a pilot program implemented by the Houston Academy of Medicine‐Texas Medical Center Library and The University of Texas School of Nursing…
SHERPA‐LEAP: A consortial model for the creation and support of academic institutional repositories
Martin Moyle, Rebecca Stockley, Suzanne TonkinThe purpose of the paper is to introduce SHERPA‐LEAP, a model for the consortial development, population and support of e‐prints repositories.
EPrints makes its mark
Nigel Stanger, Graham McGregorThe purpose of the paper is to report on the impact and cost/benefit of implementing three EPrints digital repositories at the University of Otago, and to encourage others to…
Creating an institutional repository at a challenged institution
John C. KellyThe purpose of the paper is to show how an institutional repository can be successfully created by university libraries with limited financial and technological resources.
Challenges and lessons learned: moving from image database to institutional repository
Mary E. Piorun, Lisa A. Palmer, Jim ComesThe purpose of this paper is to chronicle the Lamar Soutter Library's effort to build an educational image database, and how the project developed into an institutional repository.
ALADIN Research Commons: a consortial institutional repository
Bruce Hulse, Joan F. Cheverie, Claire T. DygertThe purpose of this paper is to explore the benefits and challenges of creating a shared institutional repository and to, describe the process by which a consortium was able to…
Developing an institutional repository: Cranfield QUEprints – a case study
Simon J. BevanThe purpose of this paper is to describe the development of the Institutional Repository at Cranfield University – Cranfield QUEprints (http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk).
The institutional repository at the University of Nebraska‐Lincoln: Its first year of operations
Paul RoysterThe purpose of this paper is to provide a short history of the first year of operation of an institutional repository (IR) at a midwestern state university. …
A multifaceted approach to promote a university repository: The University of Kansas' experience
Holly Mercer, Brian Rosenblum, Ada EmmettThe purpose of this paper is to describe the history of KU ScholarWorks, the University of Kansas' institutional repository, and the various strategies used to promote and…
PEPIA: a Norwegian collaborative effort for institutional repositories
Sverre Magnus Elvenes JokiThe purpose of this paper is to report on Project for Electronic Publications and Institutional Archives (PEPIA), which is a government‐sponsored Norwegian effort, to provide…
The RepoMMan project: Automating workflow and metadata for an institutional repository
Richard Green, Ian Dolphin, Chris Awre, Robert SherrattThe purpose of this paper is to report on the work of the JISC‐funded RepoMMan project, which is developing a tool that will allow users to interact with a Fedora‐based…
Expanding roles for the institutional repository
Marie Wise, Lisa Spiro, Geneva Henry, Sidney ByrdRice University has adopted the DSpace platform for its institutional repository, but has pushed the traditional limits of how that is defined. To accommodate a wider range of…