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Beware of categories such as "librarians" or "publishers" or even "researchers". Let us remember also that librarians were behind the creation of repositories back around 2003-4. Without them, their work and, often, their money and resources, we simply would not have these repositories. That some librarians should try to enforce very strict rules, etc. is not all that surprising: the profession is built on care, precision and rigorous management of an unwieldy set of objects. However, we should not paint the profession with too broad a brush.<BR>
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There is more to this: researchers often adopt a dismissive attitude with regard to librarians. They treat them as people delivering a service, i.e. as servants. Nothing could be more wrong. Librarians help us navigate the complex world of information. They are extremely important partners in the process of doing research. In some universities - and I believe this is the right attitude - some librarians acquire academic status and do research themselves.<BR>
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One thing that always surprises me is that, sometimes, it feels as if librarians were viewed as culprits and publishers as angels - the very term has been used. The use of global categories in either case is wrong, but the most exacting librarian that is vetting very precisely every item going into his/her repository will never skew and warp the fabric of scientific communication as some large publishers do. Let us keep things in perspective, please.<BR>
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This said, it is true that some librarians see their task as a procurement exercise, and they work with one strange guiding principle: keep good relationships with the "vendors", to use the dominant vocabulary. The Charleston conference that takes place every year is a perfect example of this trend: publishers and librarians meet with almost no researchers present. This amounts to a situation that is symmetrical to that of arrogant researchers. Researchers become "customers" of libraries, etc. And, of course, big publishers are only too happy to support such events.<BR>
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Librarians and researchers are natural allies. Elitist attitudes among researchers are anything but pleasant. Procurement objectives among librarians are obviously of the essence, but they should not become the sole guiding principle of librarians, and, IMHO, a great many librarians know this perfectly well.<BR>
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As for me, I love librarians.<BR>
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(disclosure: I married one... <IMG SRC="cid:1411563572.2584.11.camel@maison" ALIGN="middle" ALT=":-)" BORDER="0"> ).<BR>
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Jean-Claude Guédon
Professeur titulaire
Littérature comparée
Université de Montréal
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Le mercredi 24 septembre 2014 à 09:35 +0900, Andrew A. Adams a écrit :
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Dana Roth wrote:
<FONT COLOR="#737373">> Thanks to Stevan for reminding the list that working with librarians</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#737373">> will, in the long run, be much more productive than denigrating their</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#737373">> efforts.</FONT>
I am all in favour or working with librarians when those librarians are
working to promote Open Access. When librarians work in ways which inhibit my
view of the best route to Open Access, I reserve the right to criticise those
actions. There are many librarians who do get it and with who I'm happy to
share common cause, and to praise their efforts. I have in the past said that
the ideal situation for promoting open access at an institution is for a
coalition of reseaerchers, manager and librarians to work at explaining the
benefits to the institution (in achieving its mission and in gaining early
adopter relative benefits) to the rest of the researchers, managers and
librarians.
Unfortunately, in too many cases, librarians (often those who were not the
original OA evangelist librarians) apply a wrong-headed set of roadblocks to
institutional repository deposit processes which delays OA, makes deposit
more frustrating and more difficult for researchers, and weakens the deposit
process. It is these librarians that I wish to "get out of the way", not
librarians in general.
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