We use cookies to give you the best experience and to help improve our website.

Find out more about how we use cookies Thanks for letting me know
Skip to main content
Jisc logo 0203 697 5800
  • Digital content
    • eJournals
    • Learning and teaching resources
    • Maps and geospatial data
    • eBooks
    • Film and images
    • Archives
    Jisc Collections

    Finding, negotiating and providing digital content for education and research in the UK

  • Network & IT services
    • Security
    • Connectivity
    • Authentication
    • Procurement
    • Cloud
    • Email
    • Internet and IP services
    • Telecoms
    • Videoconferencing
    Janet

    Janet manages the operation and development of the UK’s research and education network

  • Advice
    • Student experience
    • Institutional management
    • Research excellence
    • Reducing costs
    • Future trends
    • Advisory services
    • Training
    Regional Support Centres

    Our 12 Regional Support Centres work across the UK, providing advice and support

  • Research & development
    Co-design

    Find out how we're piloting a new approach to projects and funding

    • Projects
    • Programmes
    • Funding and co-design
    • Running a Jisc project
Close search results

  • News
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Publications
  • About
  • Contact
  • Home
  • News
  • Open access to electronic theses soon to be commonplace
News

Open access to electronic theses soon to be commonplace

20 February 2012

Doctoral theses can attract significant attention when made openly accessible in electronic form according to the respondents of a sector-wide survey of information professionals.

The Jisc-funded survey gives a clearer picture of progress toward electronic thesis deposit in the UK, and how universities are achieving it.

The respondents to the survey were library and repository staff from 144 higher education institutions – and their responses suggested that 81% of their organisations will be providing open access to doctoral theses in five years time.

Neil Jacobs, programme director at Jisc, said: “Doctoral theses are important records of research.  Many of them are already openly accessible via repositories and the UK EThOS Service, which most UK universities have joined.  The resulting high visibility benefits both researchers and universities, and suggests that electronic theses will have a significant role to play in accelerating sharing our knowledge in the future.”

This publication was a joint venture between UKCGE, and UCL Library Services, based on a Jisc project by UCL Library Services

Tina Barnes, senior research fellow at the University of Warwick, is one of the authors of the report.  She said: “The move to electronic theses is a very positive development that wholly supports the academic principle of sharing knowledge for the common good and for the advancement of science and human development.”

Paul Ayris, director of UCL library services and co-chair of the DART-Europe partnership, said: “DART-Europe provides access to the full-text of over 280,000 Open Access research theses from 403 European universities in 20 countries. Open Access to such a critical mass of blue skies research is good for research and good for the researcher .”

The report shows there are a number of reasons why researchers may not make their theses available electronically, but the principal reason may be the inclusion of sensitive material.

Concerns regarding third-party copyright, plagiarism and restrictions on future publications are having little impact on access so far.

The report also suggests that theses need to be preserved over the long term - something that the British Library service, EThOS, originally a Jisc project, aims to do.

Watch the presentation for more on the key findings of the report

Read the report

Find out more about the project  

Most read
  • Changes to Jisc funding
  • Oxford University Press joins OAPEN-UK project
  • Jisc Collections boosts online learning resources for engineering and technology students
  • Development underway for shared national library services in Scotland and Wales
  • E-books for FE project provides new titles to improve online teaching and learning
Related
  • Changes to Jisc funding
  • Launching the world’s first 3D virtual fossil collection
  • Jisc ranked 3rd in top US technology rankings
  • Education pioneer signs up to our future-gazing technology event
  • Opening access to UK theses

You may also like…

News

Jisc Collections boosts online learning resources for engineering and technology students

26 September 2013
Guides

Defining your vision, mission and values

Popular content

  • Putting people at the heart of the digital revolution
  • Jisc Digital Festival 2014
  • DIY augmented reality apps
  • Changes to Jisc funding
  • Developing students' digital literacy

Useful links

  • Feedback
  • Using our content
  • Cookies
  • Website
  • Youtube
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • @Jisc
  • 'Caution on the road towards education-by-technology' http://t.co/4ftGUVuaRA (via @WorldCrunch) #edtech
Digital content
  • eJournals
  • Learning and teaching resources
  • Maps and geospatial data
  • eBooks
  • Film and images
  • Archives
Network & IT services
  • Security
  • Connectivity
  • Authentication
  • Procurement
  • Cloud
  • Email
  • Internet and IP services
  • Telecoms
  • Videoconferencing
Advice
  • Student experience
  • Institutional management
  • Research excellence
  • Reducing costs
  • Future trends
  • Advisory services
  • Training
Research & development
  • Projects
  • Programmes
  • Funding and co-design
  • Running a Jisc project
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 UK: England & Wales
This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND