(sorry for the cross-posting)


COAR is pleased to announce the publication of the work of the Next Generation 
Repositories Working Group, Behaviours and Technical Recommendations of the 
COAR Next Generation Repositories Working Group 
<https://www.coar-repositories.org/activities/advocacy-leadership/working-group-next-generation-repositories/>
 
In April 2016, the Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR) launched 
the Next Generation Repository Working Group to identify new functionalities 
and technologies for repositories. In this report, we are pleased to present 
the results of the work of this group, including recommendations for the 
adoption of new technologies, standards, and protocols that will help 
repositories become more integrated into the web environment and enable them to 
play a larger role in the scholarly communication ecosystem.
The current system for disseminating research, which is dominated by commercial 
publishers, is far from ideal. In an economic sense, prices for both 
subscriptions and APCs are over-inflated and will likely continue to rise at 
unacceptable rates. Additionally, there are significant inequalities in the 
international publishing system both in terms of access and participation. The 
incentives built into the system, which oblige researchers to publish in 
traditional publishing venues, perpetuate these problems and greatly stifle our 
ability to evolve and innovate.

At COAR, we believe the globally distributed network of more than 3000 
repositories can be leveraged to create a more sustainable and innovative 
system for sharing and building on the results of research. Collectively, 
repositories can provide a comprehensive view of the research of the whole 
world, while also enabling each scholar and institution to participate in the 
global network of scientific and scholarly enquiry. Building additional 
services such as standardized usage metrics, peer review and social networking 
on top of a trusted global network of repositories has the potential to offer a 
viable alternative.

The vision underlying the work of Next Generation Repositories is,

To position repositories as the foundation for a distributed, globally 
networked infrastructure for scholarly communication, on top of which layers of 
value added services will be deployed, thereby transforming the system, making 
it more research-centric, open to and supportive of innovation, while also 
collectively managed by the scholarly community.

An important component of this vision is that repositories will provide access 
to a wide variety of research outputs, creating the conditions whereby a 
greater diversity of contributions to the scholarly record will be accessible, 
and also formally recognized in research assessment processes.

Our vision is aligned with others, such as MIT’s Future of Libraries Report 
<https://future-of-libraries.mit.edu/> and Lorcan Dempsey’s notion of the 
“inside-out” library 
<https://www.liberquarterly.eu/articles/10.18352/lq.10170/>, that are defining 
a new role of libraries in the 21st century. This future involves a shift away 
from libraries purchasing content for their local users, towards libraries 
curating and sharing with the rest of the world the research outputs produced 
at their institution. COAR’s mission is to ensure that, as libraries and 
research organizations invest in and enhance their local services, they adopt 
common standards and functionalities that will allow them to participate in the 
global network. We very much hope that the recommendations provided in this 
report will contribute to the transition towards this new role for repositories 
and libraries.

This was a truly collaborative effort. We would like to sincerely thank the 
members of the Next Generation Repositories Working Group 
<https://www.coar-repositories.org/activities/advocacy-leadership/working-group-next-generation-repositories/next-generation-repositories-working-group/>
 for their generous contributions and significant efforts towards this 
undertaking. They have brought a breadth and depth of expertise, without which 
we would not have been able to accomplish this work. We are very grateful!

Eloy Rodrigues, COAR Chairman and Kathleen Shearer, COAR Executive Director


Kathleen Shearer
Executive Director, Confederation of Open Access Repositories (COAR)
m.kathleen.shea...@gmail.com <mailto:m.kathleen.shea...@gmail.com> - +1 514 992 
9068
Skype: kathleen.shearer2 - twitter: @KathleeShearer
www.coar-repositories.org





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