Published July 17, 2019 | Version v2
Dataset Open

LIBER 2019 Workshop. Open Access books in academic libraries – how can we adapt workflows and cost management to an open scholarly communications landscape?

  • 1. Stockholm University, Sweden
  • 2. OAPEN Foundation, The Netherlands
  • 3. Jisc, United Kingdom
  • 4. ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics
  • 1. Director of Open Science, Consortium of Services of the Universities of Catalonia (CSUC)
  • 2. OA2020 Partner Development, Max Planck Digital Library, Germany
  • 3. Head of International Projects, LIBER
  • 4. Head of Licensing, National Library of Finland
  • 5. Head of the Centre for Scientific Information, Ruđer Bošković Institute, Croatia
  • 6. Institutional Repository Manager, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain
  • 7. Open Access Advisor, UiT The Arctic University of Norway
  • 8. Program Manager for Open Access, National Library of Sweden
  • 9. Librarian Coordinator, University of Turin, Italy

Description

This dataset includes all the results from a workshop held at the LIBER Annual Conference 2019 on June 26, 2019, in Dublin, Ireland. The workshop aimed at collecting and discussing current library practices related to open access books.

The dataset includes information from a survey made in preparation for the conference, where 67 European libraries responded to a questionnaire based on activities or workflows in libraries related to open access books. Both the survey questionnaire and the results from the survey are uploaded as separate files.

The dataset also includes the presentation made by keynote speaker Eelco Ferwerda from the OAPEN Foundation. He presented results based on the 2017 landscape study report on open access monographs with some new results from more recent studies by Springer Nature and a follow-up report by Knowledge Exchange.

Olaf Siegert from ZBW - Leibniz Information Centre for Economics presented a brief overview of what libraries can do to promote OA books in terms of collection management, publication services and development of staff and organisation. The conclusion is that it is not necessarily big changes that are needed.

Sofie Wennström presented results from a survey aimed at European research libraries on behalf of the LIBER Open Access Working Group. The survey reveals that many libraries are already working with processes to promote OA books. This is done by libraries organising publishing services or inhouse publishing, by including OA books in discovery services and repositories and by supporting authors to learn more about open access and open licensing.

Finally, the LIBER Open Access Working Group shares a report from the workshop providing some quick takeaways and some good examples brought up during the breakout session with the workshop participants.

Files

LIBER_OA_Book_Workshop_Slides_Siegert_June2019.pdf

Files (22.3 MB)

Additional details