Open access to 948,500 e-prints in Physics, Mathematics, Computer Science, Quantitative Biology, Quantitative Finance and Statistics, hosted by Cornell University Library
DSpace is the software of choice for academic, non-profit, and commercial organizations building open digital repositories. It is free and easy to install "out of the box" and completely customizable to fit the needs of any organization.
A nonprofit network where humanities scholars can create a professional profile, discuss common interests, develop new publications, and share their work. The Humanities Commons network is open to anyone.
Initiative started by the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) and the Center for Open Science to create a searchable open database of funded research with an available API for institutional repositories
Funded by the OpenAIRE Consortium (an open access network) and CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research. The site is a non-profit and integrates easily with your GitHub account. It allows users 50 GB of storage for each dataset, though you can contact them and lobby for more.
Provides an overview of the major issues that institutions need to address in implementing an
institutional repository and a contextual introduction to each of the issues that one might consider in a particular institution’s context, and directs readers to resources that provide additional detail.
Resource written by University of Texas at Arlington provides templates, worksheets and workflows for large scale digitization projects, which are relevant and helpful for repository and digitization work by libraries.
RightsStatements.org provides a set of standardized rights statements that can be used to communicate the copyright and re-use status of digital objects to the public. These can be useful in repositories and other digital collections such as digital cultural heritage.
Webinar (2014) sponsored by ALCTS that shows how Oregon State University Libraries has successfully integrated its institutional repository into faculty research and scholarship activities.
Slides from a presentation (2012) offering the perspective of a subject liaison and an institutional repository manager on how they can collaborate to promote and build the IR
ALCTS webinar (2014) that shows how a small institution with limited staffing and resources achieved a high rate of faculty participation in the institutional repository. See full playlist of ALCTS webinars on institutional repositories at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8DE994EE443BC8CF
ALCTS webinar (2012) hosted by California Polytechnic State University who discuss strategies for marketing an IR to campus and ways of demonstrating the return on investment. See full playlist of ALCTS webinars on institutional repositories at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8DE994EE443BC8CF