Abstract

INTRODUCTION Institutional repositories (IRs) are an accepted part of the open access landscape, and they have a particular role to play in supporting scholarly communication in developing countries, such as Indonesia. METHODS Content analysis was conducted of 52 Indonesian higher education institutional repository websites between November 2014 and February 2015. Assessment included the degrees of “openness” of repositories, the types of works collected, software used, exploration tools, existence of links to institutional website, the language used for access points, and the standard of metadata. The study also gathered qualitative indicators of local practices in the management and population of repositories. RESULTS Only 26.9% of the surveyed IRs provide all or most documents in full-text; the most widely included types of work are Theses and Dissertations (84.6%) and Published Works (80.8%), but there is also a high representation of Unpublished Works and University Records. Most IRs (90.3%) provide access points in the form of standardized subject headings, and English is widely used. DISCUSSION The characteristics of the content of the IRs surveyed suggests that many Indonesian IRs were conceived as a corporate information management system rather than as a genuine attempt to support open access. CONCLUSION The findings lead the authors to speculate that institutional repositories serving Indonesian higher education institutions are in their early adoption phase; and that initial drivers for them have been corporate information management, institutional prestige, and the need to combat plagiarism.

Highlights

  • Institutional repositories (IRs) are an accepted part of the open access landscape, and they have a particular role to play in supporting scholarly communication in developing countries, such as Indonesia

  • The 52 IRs contained 547,451 digital objects and are located in all regions of Indonesia except for Maluku (Mollucans) and Papua, regions in which there are currently no IRs jlsc-pub.org registered in Webometrics, OpenDOAR, or ROAR

  • The prevalent language of works in the IRs is Indonesian with a number of works in English

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Summary

Introduction

Institutional repositories (IRs) are an accepted part of the open access landscape, and they have a particular role to play in supporting scholarly communication in developing countries, such as Indonesia. Another significant development came with the 2003 conference convened by the Max-Planck Society that issued the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities (Max-Planck Society, 2003). The Berlin Declaration introduced the term ‘open access contributions’ instead of ‘open access publications,’ and thereby further broadened the scope of scholarly/ scientific information that came within the purview of the OA Movement (Liauw, 2013). These developments in OA have supported an alternative form of scholarly communication

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