Building an Open Source Institutional Repository at a Small Law School Library: Is it Realistic or Unattainable?

Authors

  • Fang Wang Texas Tech University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6017/ital.v30i2.3008

Abstract

Digital preservation activities among law libraries have largely been limited by a lack of funding, staffing and expertise. Most law school libraries that have already implemented an Institutional Repository (IR) chose proprietary platforms because they are easy to set up, customize, and maintain with the technical and development support they provide. The Texas Tech University School of Law Digital Repository is one of the few law school repositories in the nation that is built on the DSpace open source platform.1 The repository is the law school’s first institutional repository in history. It was designed to collect, preserve, share and promote the law school’s digital materials, including research and scholarship of the law faculty and students, institutional history, and law-related resources. In addition, the repository also serves as a dark archive to house internal records.

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Published

2011-06-01

How to Cite

Wang, F. (2011). Building an Open Source Institutional Repository at a Small Law School Library: Is it Realistic or Unattainable?. Information Technology and Libraries, 30(2), 81–84. https://doi.org/10.6017/ital.v30i2.3008

Issue

Section

Communications