10.5281/zenodo.5036355
https://zenodo.org/records/5036355
oai:zenodo.org:5036355
Moyle, Martin
Martin
Moyle
0000-0002-2065-0508
UCL (University College London)
van den Hoogen, Henk
Henk
van den Hoogen
0000-0002-7257-3209
University Library Maastricht
Oefelein, Timon
Timon
Oefelein
0000-0002-9485-5098
Springer Nature
Westerbeke, Jos
Jos
Westerbeke
0000-0001-9540-403X
Erasmus University Rotterdam
Herrmann, Elisa
Elisa
Herrmann
0000-0002-6920-949X
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin - Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, Germany
Paß, Stefanie
Stefanie
Paß
0000-0002-8651-8120
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin - Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, Germany
Rumler, Jana
Jana
Rumler
Museum für Naturkunde Berlin - Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, Germany
LIBER 2021 Session #4: Open Access: a Case for Diversity and Inclusion
Zenodo
2021
2021-06-28
eng
Presentation
10.5281/zenodo.5036354
https://zenodo.org/communities/liber2021
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
These are the slides from the LIBER 2021 Session Open Access: a Case for Diversity and Inclusion.
This session will be chaired by Martin Moyle, University College London, United Kingdom
Societal impact and open research: results of a joint partner investigation, Henk van den Hoogen, University Library Maastricht, the Netherlands; Timon Oefelein, Springer Nature, Germany
Speed talk: Online Library Access and Privacy: Best Practice, Jos Westerbeke, Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands
Open Access - A challenge for smaller research libraries, Elisa Herrmann, Stefanie Paß, Jana Rumler, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin - Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, Germany
In the first presentation, Henk van den Hoogen and Timon Oefelein present the results of a unique collaborative Open Science initiative by the Association of Universities in the Netherlands (VSNU), Springer Nature and several academic libraries in the Netherlands. This presentation provides background to the initiative, its rationale, objectives, and interdisciplinary make up, as well as summarising its key results and those from two large global researcher surveys to do with researchers’ motivations towards SDG research and usage trends of both OA and non-OA content. The presentation will be of interest to academic support librarians supporting researchers with publication and impact, as well as data librarians interested in innovative new SDG mapping technology, and bibliometric and members of the research assessment community interested in new ways of defining and capturing the societal impact of research.
Next, Jos Westerbeke will give a lightning talk about Federated Identity Management (FIM4L), one of LIBER’s Working Groups. In hist talk, they will provide insights and recommendations into authentication practices (single sign-on) for licensed materials and differing privacy issues. He will also discuss what to do when publishers delay implementing privacy enhancing changes and how the Working Group can help with setting up the right configuration for federated SSO access according to a broadly supported uniform library SSO method conforming to FIM4L principles.
Finally, Elisa Herrmann, Stefanie Paß, and Jana Rumler will provide insights from the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, a small integrated research museum within the Leibniz Association. In their presentation, they will discuss the future activities for the implementation and promotion of Open Access in their institution, which include an in-house publication fund, the development of Green Open Access infrastructures, and the handling of OA publications in the acquisition process. As a smaller institution themselves, they will also pose the question of how big the gap is in the implementation of Open Access between large and small libraries. They will then identify possibilities to narrow the gap and, in the best case, create structures that will help smaller libraries to promote Open Access and Open Science in their institutions.