E-LIS : A global repository for Librarians by Librarians
Author: Fatima Darries
Published: LIASA–in-Touch, 10(1):7.
Date: 2009

E-LIS is an acronym for Eprints in Library and Information Science. It 
is an international open archive for electronic preprints of scientific 
papers in the library and information science. It is accessible to 
anyone with Internet access at http://eprints.rclis.org
Background
E-LIS is the first international e-server, in this subject area and 
resulted from the RCLIS (Research in Computing, Library and Information 
Science) project and the DoIS (Documents in Information Science), 
promoted by the Spanish Ministry of Culture and hosted by AEPIC team on 
machines of the Italian Consorzio Interuniversitario Lombardo per 
Elaborazione Automatica (CILEA). It is a non-commercial repository. 
There is neither funding nor interest in profiting from the initiative.
E-LIS was originally founded by Jose’Manuel Barrueco, Antonella De 
Robbio, Thomas Krichel and Imma Subirats Coll and started in 2003. E-LIS 
relies on the voluntary work of individuals from a wide range of 
backgrounds. Currently, there are 64 editors from 42 countries across 
the world. The regional editor for Africa is Fatima Darries, who is also 
the country editor for South Africa, along with Wynand van der Walt.
The quality of the metadata of the submission is controlled by country 
editors.
Why a repository for Librarians
The purpose of the E-LIS archive is to make full texts documents 
visible, accessible, harvestable, searchable and useable by any 
potential user with access to the Internet. Librarians can search and 
archive their own publications and presentations in E-LIS free of charge.
E-LIS puts at the disposal of the LIS community not only metadata, but 
also full text documents which are freely accessible and retrievable 
using the full potential of the Internet.
E-LIS is for librarians. It is librarians who use it. By working 
practically in the field within the framework of Open Digital Libraries, 
it improves the knowledge of the building and management of open 
archives amongst librarians. It provides a platform for librarians to 
test and see how an open archive works and what its capabilities are.
Not only does it promote open archives in various disciplinary 
environments, but also create a valid and credible model in our own 
discipline for the building of a world LIS archive. E-LIS promotes 
self-archiving in LIS (not only in E-LIS) and offer an open archive to 
authors without acces to an institutional repository. For those who do 
have an institutional repository it offers the added advantage of an 
archive that is discipline
specific to LIS. Archiving in a global discipline specific repository 
increases the visibility for authors in the international sphere of LIS>
E-LIS allows for the establish of a base for communal work between 
librarians information technology professionals, and to enhance the Open 
Access movement
In addition to traditional Library Science subjects, E-LIS also includes 
all technical and applied disciplines relating to the Librarianship and 
Information Science world
Most arguments regarding the building of digital libraries, tools and 
scope, electronic publishing items, techniques and methodologies from 
metadata description to preservation, archiving to copyright, have place 
into E-LIS.
The repository now boasts almost 8000 eprints (research, articles and 
presentations) in the E-LIS archive! It makes it significantly large 
resource to search for information from across the world on LIS. You can 
also subscribe to the RSS Feed for alerts on new submission to E-LIS.
Author rights and responsibilites
LIS researchers, librarians, students and research institutions are 
invited to search (it’s free!), and participate by depositing their own 
work.
Articles, presentations and papers can be in any language (abstracts and 
keywords in English). Preferred formats are .pdf and .html, as these are 
best suited for later retrieval.
Statistical information regarding viewing and downloading is provided.
All works deposited in the E-LIS server remain the property of the 
author. Authors who submit work are responsible for the documents they 
archive. Authors have to ensure that the intellectual property of their 
deposited work is theirs and that no restrictions exist for digital 
distribution of the deposited work.

Fatima Darries can be reached at [email protected] and Wynand can be 
reached at [email protected].

Fonte: 
http://eprints.rclis.org/16921/1/E_LIS_for_LIASA_in_Touch_March_2009.pdf



_______________________________________________
Instruções para desiscrever-se por conta própria:
http://listas.ibict.br/cgi-bin/mailman/options/bib_virtual
Bib_virtual mailing list
[email protected]
http://listas.ibict.br/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/bib_virtual

Responder a