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Auteurs principaux: Lavoie, Brian, Malpas, Constance
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2015
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED570916
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author Lavoie, Brian
Malpas, Constance
author_facet Lavoie, Brian
Malpas, Constance
Lavoie, Brian
Malpas, Constance
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Stewardship of the Evolving Scholarly Record: From the Invisible Hand to Conscious Coordination Lavoie, Brian Malpas, Constance Academic Libraries Library Development Library Materials Library Networks Shared Resources and Services Scholarship Program Content Database Management Systems Database Design Design Requirements Information Management The long-term future of the scholarly record in its fullest expression cannot be effectively secured with stewardship strategies designed for print materials. The features of the evolving scholarly record suggest that traditional stewardship strategies, built on an "invisible hand" approach that relies on the uncoordinated, institution-scale efforts of individual academic libraries acting autonomously to maintain local collections, is no longer suitable for collecting, organizing, making available, and preserving the outputs of scholarly inquiry. As the scholarly record continues to evolve, conscious coordination will become an important organizing principle for stewardship models. Conscious coordination calls for stewardship strategies that incorporate a broader awareness of the system-wide stewardship context; declarations of explicit commitments around portions of the local collection; formal divisions of labor within cooperative arrangements; and robust networks for reciprocal access. Stewardship strategies based on conscious coordination involve an acceleration of an already perceptible transition away from relatively autonomous local collections to ones built on networks of cooperation across many organizations, within and outside the traditional cultural heritage community. Additional context can be found in our earlier report, "The Evolving Scholarly Record" (ED564827). This work is part of our Understanding the System-wide Library theme, in which we explore the characteristics and organization of collections, services, and infrastructure at scale. The goal of this work is to improve our understanding of the factors that guide institutions in their sourcing and scaling choices as they seek maximum impact and efficient provision of library collections and services.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED570916
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2015
record_format eric
spellingShingle Stewardship of the Evolving Scholarly Record: From the Invisible Hand to Conscious Coordination
Lavoie, Brian
Malpas, Constance
Academic Libraries
Library Development
Library Materials
Library Networks
Shared Resources and Services
Scholarship
Program Content
Database Management Systems
Database Design
Design Requirements
Information Management
Stewardship of the Evolving Scholarly Record: From the Invisible Hand to Conscious Coordination Lavoie, Brian Malpas, Constance Academic Libraries Library Development Library Materials Library Networks Shared Resources and Services Scholarship Program Content Database Management Systems Database Design Design Requirements Information Management The long-term future of the scholarly record in its fullest expression cannot be effectively secured with stewardship strategies designed for print materials. The features of the evolving scholarly record suggest that traditional stewardship strategies, built on an "invisible hand" approach that relies on the uncoordinated, institution-scale efforts of individual academic libraries acting autonomously to maintain local collections, is no longer suitable for collecting, organizing, making available, and preserving the outputs of scholarly inquiry. As the scholarly record continues to evolve, conscious coordination will become an important organizing principle for stewardship models. Conscious coordination calls for stewardship strategies that incorporate a broader awareness of the system-wide stewardship context; declarations of explicit commitments around portions of the local collection; formal divisions of labor within cooperative arrangements; and robust networks for reciprocal access. Stewardship strategies based on conscious coordination involve an acceleration of an already perceptible transition away from relatively autonomous local collections to ones built on networks of cooperation across many organizations, within and outside the traditional cultural heritage community. Additional context can be found in our earlier report, "The Evolving Scholarly Record" (ED564827). This work is part of our Understanding the System-wide Library theme, in which we explore the characteristics and organization of collections, services, and infrastructure at scale. The goal of this work is to improve our understanding of the factors that guide institutions in their sourcing and scaling choices as they seek maximum impact and efficient provision of library collections and services.
title Stewardship of the Evolving Scholarly Record: From the Invisible Hand to Conscious Coordination
topic Academic Libraries
Library Development
Library Materials
Library Networks
Shared Resources and Services
Scholarship
Program Content
Database Management Systems
Database Design
Design Requirements
Information Management
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED570916