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OPEN ACCESS AND INSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORIES IN KENYA BY ROSEMARY OTANDO E-RESOURCES LIBRARIAN UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI LIBRARY
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Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Dec 19, 2014

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Rosemary Otando, University of Nairobi speaking at Open Access Africa 2010
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Page 1: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

OPEN ACCESS AND INSTITUTIONAL

REPOSITORIES IN KENYA

BYROSEMARY OTANDOE-RESOURCES LIBRARIANUNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI LIBRARY

Page 2: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Why open access?

For long term preservation, organization and access or distribution of scholarly work to accelerate research and enhance progress in science and development.

Page 3: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Ways of providing Open Access1. OA Journals – Peer reviewed2. OA Repositories – Regional or

Institutional Repositories Institutional Repositories? - Set of

services that a university offer to the members of its community for the management and dissemination of digital materials created by the institution and its community members.

Page 4: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

WHY IR IN ACADEMIC AND RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS IN KENYA? To provide for an effective system to

disseminate and access research information, digitize and preserve digital content that is in danger of extinction.

Provide avenue for scholars and researchers to publish their intellectual and scholarly works

Page 5: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Why IR IN KENYA? (Cont.)

Adding to Inst./faculty prestige through showcasing their academic research

Gives authors and their works immeasurable publicity and increased visibility

Page 6: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Why IR IN KENYA?

To create mechanism for sharing information with other institutions in Kenya and beyond. Do we want to participate in our country’s development? – share scientific findings

Others are sharing why not us?

Page 7: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Others are sharing!

Opendoar – http://www.opendoar.org/

AJOL – African Journal Online - http://ajol.info/

OAISTER – Digitised material http://oaister.worldcat.org/

WorldWideScience.org – International scientific databases - http://worldwidescience.org/

Biomed Central: http://www.biomedcentral.com/

WHO publications - http://www.who.int/en/

NDLTD – Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations - http://www.ndltd.org/find

BioOne.org - sciences. http://www.bioone.org/

Open J- Gate - http://www.openj-gate.org/Footer/About.aspx

Page 8: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Others are sharing!

Plosone – peer-reviewed science publications http://www.plosone.org/static/guidelines.action

Open Humanities Press - http://openhumanitiespress.org/index.html

Oxford Open Access Journals - http://www.oxfordjournals.org/oxfordopen/

Kenya Law Reports - http://www.kenyalaw.org/update/index.php

African Digital Library – free for Africa http://www.africaeducation.org/adl/

OER sites - OERAfrica – Established by SA Inst. - http://www.oerafrica.org/Home/tabid/36/Default.aspx

Lawyers in Africa http://www.apkn.org/dspace/xmlui/

Page 9: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

KLISC INSTITUTIONS AND IR PROJECTS

Concept of IR Introduced earlier (ILRI, Moi)

2008, 2009,2010- workshops on Open Access and free software that can be used for IR e.g. DSpace and Greenstone software.

Follow-up visits and workshops to enhance skills and to sensitize staff on IR.

Page 10: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

KLISC INSTITUTIONS AND IR PROJECTS (Cont.) Currently, most inst. are in the

development stage, i.e. Installation Customization Submission stage

Page 11: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

KLISC INSTITUTIONS AND IR PROJECTS (Cont.)

Involving key stakeholders e.g. university administrators, policy makers, students, academic staff etc

Policy issues Sensitization and training

Page 12: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Identified KLISC institutions implementing IR (Mostly full text

items) ILRI (Online)• KARI (Online)• University of Nairobi (60 items - LAN)• Kenyatta University (Past Papers)• College of Insurance (30 items)• KMFRI (Advanced stage – 400 items)• The Kenya Polytechnic University College (Project

collapsed)• Kabarak (Advanced stage – (3000 items)• Baraton (Development stage - customization)• Agha Khan University (Development stage)

Page 13: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Identified Institutions (Cont.)

• Strathmore (Advanced stage – LAN/WAN)• Marist International (55 items)• Moi (Advanced stage – LAN)• KCA (Initial stage – Customization and policy issues)• JKUAT (Initial stage – Policy Issues)• KEMRI (full-text)• Egerton (Initial – Policy issues)• Maseno University (Initial-customization, Policy issues)• Daystar (Initial – Policy Issues)• St. Paul university (Initial – customization, policy issues)

Page 14: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

KLISC Institutions Implementing IR

31%

69%

KLISC InstitutionsImplementing IR

KLISC Institutions not yetimplementing IR

Page 15: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Choice of software (Greenstone/DSpace)

52%32%

16%

Dspace

Greenstone

Both

Page 16: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Type of Content/collections Submitted to IRs in Kenya

Audio and video files, films and images of distinguished staff, visitors, monuments, and buildings.

Conferment of Honorary Degrees Presentations/speeches from

distinguished guests.

Page 18: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Technical reports, theses and dissertations, gray literature, teaching modules, manuals and guides.

Page 19: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Type of Content/collections (Cont.) Television broadcasts/interviews Research articles, workshop

materials Working papers and conference

proceedings

Page 20: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Level of access

Allowed to search, access and download full text, bibliographic and abstracts.

16%

84%

On WAN

On LAN

Page 21: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Sample of Screen-shot of IR homepage

Page 22: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions
Page 23: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions
Page 24: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions
Page 25: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions
Page 26: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Challenges

ICT infrastructure Inadequate staff – need for adequate staff to

run the project i.e. full time administrator, ICT person, Digitization expert

Policy Issues (Expert guidance on copyright issues)

Promotion – concept is foreign (Convincing faculties to contribute in the development of the project – faculty adoption disappointing)

Page 27: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Future plans For KLISC

Follow-up workshops and visits Follow-up visits, workshops and

training to sensitize academic staff and researchers on the need for IR and sharing of information.

Sustainability (Proposal for budget for sustainability)

Page 28: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Future plans

Deal with licensing, privacy issues and Copyright issues (Develop IR policies)

Suggestion - government and funding bodies to mandate their funded researchers to deposit a copy of the articles in their IR.

Deal with staffing and training. Raising awareness – aggressive marketing to

solicit content by collaborating with faculties to build the repository.

Page 29: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Future Plans(Cont.)

Launching IRs – ILRI and KARI, the only IR that is alive on the web; Strathmore, UoN on LAN but launching soon; others in the development stage

Training trainers for Kenyan institutions – have local experts in the two software to support the upcoming institutions.

Soliciting for funds and a budget for sustainability of the IR projects.

Page 30: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

Future plans

Activation of full-text access to users. Reach other institutions that have interest

to establish IR (Both government and private institutions)

Follow-up visits to enhance skills and provide additional support.

Increase collections and provide access via the WAN (Open Access )

Page 31: Open access and institutional repositories in research and academic institutions

CONCLUSION.

Scientific findings do not belong to a country but to the whole world

Thank you!