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May 19, 2015 Access to scientific information in Cambodia Phnom Penh 8 August 2011 Anders Wändahl
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May 19, 2015 About me Anders Wändahl anders@golonka.se Librarian Affiliated with Karolinska Institutet, ISP, INFORM-Certiorem, EMS-CDC
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May 19, 2015 Purpose Information on how to find scientific materials effectively & efficiently in Cambodia
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May 19, 2015 Target groups Researchers in developing countries. Several access programmes – use them or loose them! Any researcher – spread the word about the existence of these resources! Generally speaking, underusage is a bigger problem than lack of access!
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May 19, 2015 Content? Bibliographic databases Preprints/e-prints/postprints (arXiv). Journals; Open Access, Retroactive Digitization, Subsidized Access, Document Delivery…
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Wiki http://acdcwiki.net/ http://acdcwiki.net/
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New opportunities through e-resources The researchers have a much better access to scientific literature Lower price (< 5% of list price) Access to backfiles National access common
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New problems through e- resources e-resources demands: electricity internet connection (bandwidth) local network computers skills to use the e-resources
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The importance of reference databases Not second class researchers! Try to find the ”right” references! Try (at all expense?) to find the papers! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_academic_da tabases_and_search_engineshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_academic_da tabases_and_search_engines
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Open access DOAJ – only scientific journals, several languagesDOAJ Open J-gate – different types of journals – more titles than DOAJ. Only metadata searchable.Open J-gate
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Preprints ArXiv – mathematics, physics, computer science.ArXiv SSRN (Social Science Research Network) – economy, law, management.SSRN E-LIS – E-prints in Library and Information ScienceE-LIS RePEc – Research Papers in EconomicsRePEc OAIster – Union catalogue of various repositoriesOAIster
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Special programmes for low-income countries A number of different programmes in different subjects and content types, and for different target groups Global Continental Bilateral
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http://www.opensciencedirectory.net/ Open Access + ”subscribed” journals
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Special programmes for LiCs continued Three UN-financed programmes HINARI - medicine OARE - environment AGORA - agriculture
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Special programmes for LiCs continued Common rules for all three programmes: Institutions in countries with a low GNP can register for free access. Hard to find journals (i.e. Elsevier) Good training materials
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Special programmes for LiCs continued HINARI – Health Internetwork Access to Research Initiative Health – but also other subjects such as biology, chemistry, economics, evironment, mathematics, physics, social sciences etc. 8300+ journals (400+ books)
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Special programmes for LiCs continued
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Good training materials: http://www.who.int/hinari/training/en/index.html
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Special programmes for LiCs continued Connection between HINARI and PubMed http://www.who.int/hinari/training/en/index.html
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Special programmes for LiCs continued OARE – Online Access to Research in the Environment Environment – but also other subjects such as biosciences, geology, geography, etc. ~ 4100 journals (200+ books)
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Special programmes for LiCs continued Database access through OARE: Environment Index (EBSCO) Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management (CSA)
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Special programmes for LiCs continued Environment Index (via OARE)
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Special programmes for LiCs continued Environmental Sciences and Pollution Management (via OARE)
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Special programmes for LiCs continued AGORA – Access to Global Online Research in Agriculture Agriculture – but also other subjects such as environment, food production, biology, chemistry, etc. ~ 2300 journals
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Special programmes for LiCs continued CAB Abstracts database available where you will find approx 80% of the content in AGORA.
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May 19, 2015 Developing Nations Access Initiative : JSTOR waives its standard participation fees (the Archive Capital Fee and Annual Access Fee) for any not-for-profit institution in selected developing countries [including Cambodia] for 2009, 2010, and 2011, with a modest contribution after 2011. 2012 = $250 2013 = $500 2014 = $500 http://jstor.org
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Consortia A sustainable solution is to create (national) consortia for access to scientific materials. Two organizations that help institutions to create consortia are INASP eIFL
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Consortia continued INASPINASP – International Network for the Availability of Scientific Publications. Mainly developing countries.
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Consortia continued eIFLeIFL – Electronic Information for Libraries Low- and middle-income and countries.
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Consortia continued Cambodian Electronic Information for Libraries Consortium (Cam-EIFL) http://www.eifl.net/country/cambodia Resources Hin Heu - hin@cdri.org.kh
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Document delivery POPLINE (reproductive health) http://www.popline.org/ http://www.popline.org/ eJDS (mathematics/physics) http://library.ictp.it/ejds/http://library.ictp.it/ejds/ Bordeaux thèque (mathematics/computer science) http://bordeauxtheque.math.u-bordeaux1.fr/ http://bordeauxtheque.math.u-bordeaux1.fr/ British Library Direct
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Education of researchers and librarians Access to resources is not enough. Underusage is a bigger problem than lack of access. The potential users must know: –That the resources exists –How to find them –How to use them
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Education of researchers and librarians continued Organizations engaged in education and training of researchers and librarians.
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Education of researchers and librarians continued ITOCAITOCA - Information training and outreach centre for Africa Training on HINARI, OARE, AGORA and TEEAL.
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How to move forward… Register for HINARI, OARE, AGORA (free) Contact Hin Heu - hin@cdri.org.kh
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Wiki http://acdcwiki.net/ http://acdcwiki.net/
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May 19, 2015 Don’t give up!
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