Download - You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Transcript
Page 1: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

You Call that Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Chris BulockElectronic Resources Librarian

[email protected]

Page 2: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Print WorldLibrary Ownership

Page 3: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Electronic WorldLeasing Access

Shifting Responsibility

Page 4: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Blending Formats

• Journals• Books• Video and music resources• Interactive resources

Page 5: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Current StateCarr (2011): libraries want it, but may undermine the goal.Stemper & Barribeau (2006): Publishers are providing it.Waller & Bird (2006): Libraries don’t do a great job of tracking entitlements.

Page 6: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Libraries that have acquired resources with perpetual access

provision

Page 7: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Licensing

Perpetual Access

Yes

No

Page 8: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Hosting your ownOnline vs. Physical

Alternative providers (LOCKSS, Portico)

Page 9: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Costs

To Be DeterminedDefined as a Percentage

Page 10: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

eBook EditionsHow long is Perpetual?

Keep purchased edition

Move to new edition

Lose all access

Page 11: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Interactive and other Media

Long term viability of format

Image by Groink from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:VHS-cassette.jpg

Page 12: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Tracking

Does your library systematically track perpetual access?

Page 13: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Pieces to Track

Whether perpetual access is availableHosting details, costsJournals: what dates are includedBooks: terms regarding editionMultimedia: format and potential concerns

Page 14: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Systems Used to Track

Page 15: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Tracking with an ERMS

License module or Resource levelDedicated fields and open ended

notesVendor, database, title

Parent-Child relationships

Page 16: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Knowledge Bases

Journals: 2 sets of dates

Books: editions

Page 17: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Information SourcesILS: subscription years, book editionsAdmin sites: titles and years of access

Image from Taylor and Francis admin site

Page 18: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Information SourcesSubscription agents: terms and years of access

Image from EBSCONET

Page 19: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Trigger Events

Cancellations Journal transfer Platform

migration New book

edition

Page 20: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Identifying Triggers

Book AlertsTransfer Notification List

Listservs

Page 21: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

Keep it Up

Perpetual access: Perpetual effortDocumentation

Image by User:S Sepp from http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Wooden_hourglass_3.jpg

Page 22: You Call That Perpetual? Issues in Perpetual Access

References• Bulock, C. (2013). Tracking Perpetual Access.

http://www.siue.edu/~cbulock/poster.html• Carr, P. (2011). The Commitment to Securing

Perpetual Journal Access. LRTS, 55(1), 4–17. doi: 10.5860/lrts.55n1.4

• Stemper, J., & Barribeau, S. (2003). Perpetual Access to Electronic Journals: A Survey of One Academic Research Library’s Licenses. LRTS, 50(2), 91–110. doi: 10.5860/lrts.50n2.91

• Waller, A., & Bird, G. (2006). “We Own It.”: Dealing with “Perpetual Access” in Big Deals. The Serials Librarian, 50(1-2), 179–196. doi:10.1300/J123v50n01_17