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RoMEO Studies 2: How academics want to protect their open-access research papers

Gadd, Elizabeth and Oppenheim, Charles and Probets, Steve (2003) RoMEO Studies 2: How academics want to protect their open-access research papers.

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Abstract

This paper is the second in a series of studies (see Gadd, E., C. Oppenheim, and S. Probets. RoMEO Studies 1: The impact of copyright ownership on author-self-archiving, Journal of Documentation 59 (3) 243-277) emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Rights Metadata for Open-archiving). It considers the protection for research papers afforded by UK copyright law, and by e-journal licenses. It compares this with the protection required by academic authors for open-access research papers as discovered by the RoMEO academic author survey. The survey used the Open Digital Rights Language (ODRL) as a framework for collecting views from 542 academics as to the permissions, restrictions, and conditions they wanted to assert over their works. Responses from self-archivers and non-archivers are compared. Concludes that most academic authors are primarily interested in preserving their moral rights, and that the protection offered research papers by copyright law is way in excess of that required by most academics. It also raises concerns about the level of protection enforced by e-journal license agreements.

EPrint Type:Report
Keywords:Moral rights;
Subjects:Scholarly Communication
ID Code:644
Deposited On:08 December 2004
Alternative Locations:http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ls/disresearch/romeo/
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