CDLINFO LISTSERV, March 13, 2003 Vol.6 No. 5 Issue
NOTE: New resources listed below are not yet in the CDL Directory of Collections and Services; they will be added within the next 2 weeks. You can access them directly from the URL provided.
A list of recently added content is always available at: http://www.cdlib.org/news/whatsnew.html
Endorsed by the CDL Joint Steering Committee on Shared Collections, four additional journals from the Berkeley Electronic Press (bepress) have been licensed for all campuses by the CDL. In addition to the valuable content these journals represent, the decision to license them was influenced by a desire to support bepress's innovative models of scholarly communication. A number of UC faculty serve as editors for these new reasonably priced journals.
The CDL's three-year agreement (2002-2004) for bepress titles included twelve economics titles in three series. Two additional economics journals are now available and have been added to the agreement:
Journal of Agricultural & Food Industrial Organization: http://www.bepress.com/jafio
Studies in Nonlinear Dynamics & Econometrics: http://www.bepress.com/snde (Note that this was previously published by MIT Press)
In addition to the economics titles, the CDL's agreement with bepress now also includes a political science and an engineering title:
The Forum: A Journal of Applied Research in Contemporary Politics: http://www.bepress.com/forum
International Journal of Chemical Reactor Engineering: http://www.bepress.com/ijcre
Additional information on bepress can be found at: http://www.bepress.com
The CDL Joint Steering Committee on Shared Collections (JSC), in consultation with campus bibliographers, has completed the first round of identifying open access resources (i.e., freely available non-licensed resources) suitable for cataloguing (by the Shared Cataloguing Program; and to be included in the CDL Directory) and linking (UC-eLinks).
The purpose of this investment is to support open access models of scholarly communication by integrating these resources via the same tools as paid resources. To be considered for cataloguing/linking, open access ejournals must be included in major abstracts or indexes. Such journals should be recommended to JSC liaisons with confirmation of indexing. Such recommendations need not be confined to JSC bibliographer semi-annual surveys. The JSC also recommended cataloging several sets (at the individual title level) of monographs and reports (e.g., Making of America, Rand Corporation Reports). Shared Cataloguing has begun cataloguing the first set of open access resources; they will be included in the CDL Directory and UC-eLinks in the coming weeks.
See previous CDLINFO article (September 12, 2002, Vol.5, No.16 http://www.cdlib.org/news/cdlinfo/cdlinfo091202.html#3) for further background information.
Nearly 100 UC institutes, departments, research units, and centers from 9 UC campuses have joined the repository. The eScholarship Repository contains 1,200 papers. Users have logged 60,000 full-text downloads of repository scholarship. Usage statistics show that over 95 percent of repository users are coming from outside UC, including 38 countries. This demonstrates the increased visibility the repository offers UC faculty.
A wide range of subjects can be found in the repository, including social science, business, education, humanities, and the sciences. The Anderson School of Management at UCLA, Center for Studies in Higher Education at Berkeley, University of California Energy Institute (a Multi-Campus Research Unit), Economics Department at Santa Barbara, Center for Conservation Biology at Riverside, and Scripps Institution of Oceanography at San Diego are just a few of the UC academic departments and research units with repository sites.
The eScholarship Repository also supports peer-reviewed series, which offer scholars an alternative to for-profit journals. The University of California International and Area Studies (UCIAS) Digital Collection <http://repositories.cdlib.org/uciaspubs/> has been available since summer 2002. Further information on starting a repository peer-reviewed series can be found at <http://repositories.cdlib.org/escholarship/peer_review.html>.
The complete March 12, 2003 press release on the eScholarship Repository can be found at <http://repositories.cdlib.org/escholarship/milestones.pdf>. Additional information on the repository is available at <http://repositories.cdlib.org/escholarship/about.html> or through your campus eScholarship liaison <http://escholarship.cdlib.org/liaisons.html>.
As promised earlier this year, the CDL now has an updated information page, “Using Citation Management Software with Vendor Databases” (previously titled, “The A&I Transition and Citation Management Software”). We have revised it with input from UC library staff and discussions with vendors.
This Web page is available on the CDL public site so that it can be accessed by all users of citation management software: http://www.cdlib.org/news/citman.html
It is also linked to from the Adaptable Outreach and Instructional Materials page <http://www.cdlib.org/libstaff/comm/outreach/> from Other Resources, EndNote, ProCite and Reference Manager. Library staff can modify it for their own use at their campuses, if desired.
The document contains the following information:
--Background: steps taken prior to the transition to address this issue
--What is currently working: databases, direct searching, filters, and direct
export, including exceptions, caveats, and cautions
--Known problems, including alternatives if they exist
--How to get help
--How to report problems
The CDL will continue to update this page as the landscape changes in the area of citation management software.
Peter is clearly one of the luminaries in the community of research libraries with significant digital development programs. He is currently Director, Information Technology Services, Division of Libraries and NYU Press at New York University. In that role he has led the deployment of many campus-wide applications including e-reserves, electronic gateways, and web services and has managed digital library development projects of national scope and partnerships. Peter is a participant in the Internet2/Mace Shibboleth project for user authentication and authorization, which has direct implications for digital library services. The Digital Library Federation and the Coalition of Networked Information are partners in the Shibboleth project and Peter has represented NYU in both of those organizations.
Many UC staff will remember and appreciate Peter’s earlier ties to UC. He served as Director of Academic Information Systems at the Library and Center for Knowledge Management at UC San Francisco, and more recently as Director of Computing Services for the College of Letters and Science at Berkeley. The CDL is thrilled to welcome Peter back to the UC community and the west coast. He expects to take up his position on March 24, 2003.
This will mark the conclusion of John Ober’s interim responsibility as Director of CDL Technologies, which he has carried since May 2002 (along with his position as Director of Education and Strategic Innovation). John’s tenure has had the challenges of major technical transitions and expansion. These include the Melvyl-T project, the addition of SFX/UC-eLinks, establishment or redesign of Counting California, the Online Archive of California, and a Consortial Borrowing System, and a renegotiation of data center machine room services. We are extremely thankful for John’s willingness to step into the breach and for the successful and quietly confident nature of his leadership during the recruitment for a permanent director. John will resume full-time attention to education, outreach, evaluation and strategic planning for the CDL and also lend his expertise in those areas to systemwide library planning.
As you have the opportunity, I urge you to welcome Peter to the family of UC libraries and to thank John for a job well done.
Remember also that reports, working documents, and status information of particular interest to library staff, are all available at http://www.cdlib.org/libstaff/.
For information about whether your UC campus has access to a particular electronic journal or Internet resource, contact your local collection development officer.
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