[Bildzitat] Unkommentiert – Entstehungsjahr unbekannt
„Librarians are the secret masters of the world. They control information. Don’t ever piss one off.“ Spider Robinson
Bibliothekarisch – die berufliche Tätigkeit eine:r Bibliothekar:in betreffend.
„Librarians are the secret masters of the world. They control information. Don’t ever piss one off.“ Spider Robinson
Vor kurzem fand die jährliche Konferenz des US-amerikanischen Bibliotheksverbandes unter dem Motto „Transforming Our Libraries, Ourselves“ in Las Vegas statt. Jennifer Kahnweiler, die Autorin, Coach und gefragte Rednerin äußert sich folgenden Video zu Bibliotheken als besondere Orte:
Quelle: Stephen’s Lighthouse
In the fall semester of 2012, NC State University students were challenged to create a „Super Bowl Commercial“ for the NCSU Libraries, a video that „captures what the NCSU Libraries means to you, to your friends, to NC State, to North Carolina, to the world—to any or all of these.“ Vann Dwiggins took first place with this challenge to „learn to fall in love all over again when the new James B. Hunt Jr. Library opens in January 2013.“
Frisch erschienen ist die zweite Ausgabe des Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication (JLSC) (ISSN: 2162-3309). Das OA-eJournal wird durch Pacific University Library der Pacific University (Oregon) veröffentlicht. Alle Beiträge stehen unter einer CC-BY-Lizenz.
Das Journal enthält unter anderem eine Antwort auf Klaus Grafs Beitrag aus der ersten Ausgabe:
Point & Counterpoint: Is CC BY the Best Open Access License? [PDF] – Klaus Graf and Sanford Thatcher.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Editorial
Commentary
Research Articles
Practice Article
Brief Reviews of Books and Products
Frisch erschienen bemerkt ist das Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication (ISSN: 2162-3309). Es wird veröffentlicht durch Pacific University Library der Pacific University (Oregon). Alle Beiträge stehen unter einer CC-BY-Lizenz.
The Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication seeks to share useful innovations, both in thought and in practice, with the aim of encouraging scholarly exchange and the subsequent benefits that are borne of scrutiny, experimentation and debate. As modes of scholarly communication, the technologies and economics of publishing and the roles of libraries evolve, it is our hope that the work shared in the journal will inform practices that strengthen librarianship and that increase access to the „common Stock of Knowledge.“
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Editorial
- What is in a Name? Introducing the Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication [PDF] – Isaac Gilman and Marisa Ramirez
- In Memoriam: Deborah Barreau [PDF] – Gary Marchionini
Commentary
- The Movement to Change Scholarly Communication Has Come a Long Way – How Far Might It Go? [PDF] – Joyce Ogburn
- Coming in the Back Door: Leveraging Open Textbooks To Promote Scholarly Communications on Campus [PDF] – Steven J. Bell
- Point & Counterpoint: Is CC BY the Best Open Access License? [PDF] – Klaus Graf and Sanford Thatcher
Research Articles
- The Anatomy of a Data Citation: Discovery, Reuse, and Credit [PDF] – Hailey Mooney and Mark P. Newton
- The Accessibility Quotient: A New Measure of Open Access [PDF] – Mathew A. Willmott, Katharine H. Dunn, and Ellen Finnie Duranceau
- Does Tenure Matter? Factors Influencing Faculty Contributions to Institutional Repositories [PDF] – Anne M. Casey
Practice Article
- Innovation Fair Abstracts, SPARC 2012 Open Access Meeting [PDF] – Abstract Authors
Theory Article
- Open Access Publishing Practices in a Complex Environment: Conditions, Barriers, and Bases of Power [PDF] – Thomas L. Reinsfelder
Brief Reviews of Books and Products