Cargando…

Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record

As the migration of scholarly communication from print to digital continues to progress rapidly, and as Open Access to that research literature and related data becomes more common, the challenges of insuring that the scholarly record remain available over time becomes more urgent. There has been go...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Smith, MacKenzie, Bjørnshauge, Lars
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1027611
_version_ 1780912290955001856
author Smith, MacKenzie
Bjørnshauge, Lars
author_facet Smith, MacKenzie
Bjørnshauge, Lars
author_sort Smith, MacKenzie
collection CERN
description As the migration of scholarly communication from print to digital continues to progress rapidly, and as Open Access to that research literature and related data becomes more common, the challenges of insuring that the scholarly record remain available over time becomes more urgent. There has been good progress on those challenges in recent years, but many problems remain. The current state of the curation and preservation of digital scholarship over its entire lifecycle will be reviewed, and progress on problems of specific interest to scholarly communication will be examined. The difficulty of curating the digital scholarly record and preserving it for future generations has important implications for the movement to make that record more open and accessible to the world, so this a timely topic for those who are interested in the future of scholarly communication.
id cern-1027611
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2007
record_format invenio
spelling cern-10276112019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1027611engSmith, MacKenzieBjørnshauge, LarsOpen Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly RecordInformation Transfer and ManagementAs the migration of scholarly communication from print to digital continues to progress rapidly, and as Open Access to that research literature and related data becomes more common, the challenges of insuring that the scholarly record remain available over time becomes more urgent. There has been good progress on those challenges in recent years, but many problems remain. The current state of the curation and preservation of digital scholarship over its entire lifecycle will be reviewed, and progress on problems of specific interest to scholarly communication will be examined. The difficulty of curating the digital scholarly record and preserving it for future generations has important implications for the movement to make that record more open and accessible to the world, so this a timely topic for those who are interested in the future of scholarly communication.oai:cds.cern.ch:10276112007-04-19
spellingShingle Information Transfer and Management
Smith, MacKenzie
Bjørnshauge, Lars
Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record
title Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record
title_full Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record
title_fullStr Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record
title_full_unstemmed Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record
title_short Open Access Forever - Or Five Years, Whichever Comes First: Progress on Preserving the Digital Scholarly Record
title_sort open access forever - or five years, whichever comes first: progress on preserving the digital scholarly record
topic Information Transfer and Management
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1027611
work_keys_str_mv AT smithmackenzie openaccessforeverorfiveyearswhichevercomesfirstprogressonpreservingthedigitalscholarlyrecord
AT bjørnshaugelars openaccessforeverorfiveyearswhichevercomesfirstprogressonpreservingthedigitalscholarlyrecord