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Page 1: Techniques for Tracking Perpetual Access

Techniques for Tracking Perpetual Access

Chris BulockElectronic Resources Librarian

Southern Illinois University [email protected]

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Perpetual Access: We’ve Got It

Stemper & Barribeau (2003)Zhang & Eschenfelder (2012)

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Commitment to Perpetual Access

Patrick Carr (2011). The Commitment to Securing Perpetual Journal Access. Library Resources & Technical Services 55(1) 4-17.

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Commitment to Perpetual Access

Patrick Carr (2011). The Commitment to Securing Perpetual Journal Access. Library Resources & Technical Services 55(1) 4-17.

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Does your library systematically track perpetual access for electronic journals?

http://www.siue.edu/~cbulock/poster.html

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Why Track?

Influence renewal decisionsInfluence print decisionsEasily provide access when

necessaryPublishers may not be doing itTrigger events may go unnoticed

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Scenarios

A library has a subscription to a journal that ceases publication

A subscription to a journal is canceled by a library A subscription to a journal is sold or transferred to

another publisher The publisher of a journal, or bundle of journals,

goes out of business A bundle of journals has a fluid title list The publisher of a bundle of journals is bought

completely or partially by another publisher A subscription to a bundle of journals is canceled or

not renewed by a library or consortium-Waller and Bird (2006)

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Additional Scenarios

A publisher of a journal switches from one content platform to another

A purchased book is replaced with a new edition

DualD FlipFlophttp://bit.ly/1kUKb8D

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A subscription to a journal is canceled by a library

• Determine whether PA available at all• Determine what years are available• Adjust holdings info wherever it lives

(ERM, ILS, Link Resolver)

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A library has a subscription to a journal that ceases publication

• Find out it has ceased– Usually at renewal time

• Determine what remains available• Add an end date to holdings– Possibly adjust beginning date

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A subscription to a journal is sold or transferred to another publisher

• Receive notification from publisher, listserv, or TRANSFER

• Determine what will go where and make the relevant changes to holdings (or wait for global changes to take affect in KB)

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The publisher of a journal, or bundle of journals, goes out of business

• Activate archiving provisions if available

• ?

CLOSED

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A publisher of a journal switches from one content platform to another

• Determine what perpetual access you had on old platform

• Determine if active on new platform– Notify new platform if not

• Adjust provider/access information

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What do you need to know?

If there is perpetual access in the license

If post cancellation access requires a fee

If publisher would allow for archiving, self-hosting, or alternatives

Formats providedWhether the publisher participates in

TRANSFER, LOCKSS, CLOCKSS, Portico

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What else?

If PA would apply for all issues accessible during agreement, issues published during agreement, or something else

In a package: if it applies to all journals or a subset

For books: what happens in case of new edition

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What system(s) do you use to track journal perpetual access?

http://www.siue.edu/~cbulock/poster.html

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ERM Strategies

• Tracking license information– Dedicated fields in license module if

available– Track more than yes/no if relevant

• Tracking current status of resource– Current/Perpetual/Extinct

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ERM Strategies

• Title level– Holdings will be most relevant–Wrinkles include title changes, year-to-

year title list variations– Represented as local dates/holdings in

global package or as a library-specific package

– ERM KB may feed directly to other systems

– If perpetual and current grouped under one provider, mark perpetual

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ERM example

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ILS Strategies

• Marie Kennedy. Sierra: http://orgmonkey.net/?p=1651#sthash.fQGCv14d.KOMSCVNc.dpbs

• Bib records at item level– Perpetual access holdings, possibly

suppressed until needed

• Bib record for package with local notes field

• Item category for Portico titles

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ILS Strategies

• Acquisitions module– Order records include PA note– Invoice records include access info

• May just reference order history without any special PA information

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ILS Example

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Spreadsheet Strategies

• One giant sheet, or broken down by provider

• Sheets for Big Deals may be updated yearly to reflect fluidity of title list

• Many keep a spreadsheet for individual purchases

• Often an intermediary step

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Spreadsheet Example

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Resolver KB Strategies

• May be used solely for access or also for tracking

• Options– Separate packages for different PA

statuses– Separate package for actively PA items– Stick with global package, but add local

holdings as needed

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Resolver KB Example

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Other Systems

• Subscription agent platforms• Platform administrator modules• Local databases• Paper copies of invoices

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Potential Obstacles

Publisher doesn’t comply with PIE-J, lumps former titles with new titles, deletes former from KBs

Transfer occurs and new publisher decides not to honor PA

Contracts that are silent, terms that change

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Thanks!

• Janet Arcand• Amy Castilo• Jen Leffler• Sanjeet Mann• Many Anonymous Participants