Abstract

Purpose – The paper aims to investigate the impact of the open access movement on the document supply of grey literature. Design/methodology/approach – The paper is based on a comparative survey of five major scientific and technical information centres: The British Library (UK), KM (Canada), INIST-CNRS (France), KISTI (South Korea) and TIB Hannover (Germany). Findings – The five institutions supplied less than 1.8 million supplied items in 2014, i.e. half of the activity in 2004 (−55 per cent). There were 85,000 grey documents, mainly conference proceedings and reports, i.e. 5 per cent of the overall activity, a historically low level compared to 2004 (−72 per cent). At the same time, they continue to expand their open access strategies. Just as in 2004 and 2008, these strategies are specific, and they reflect institutional and national choices rather than global approaches, with two or three common or comparable projects (PubMed Central, national repositories, attribution of DOIs to datasets, dissertations and other objects). In spite of all differences, their development reveals some common features, like budget cuts, legal barriers (copyright), focus on domestic needs and open access policies to foster dissemination and impact of research results. Document supply for corporate customers tends to become a business-to-business service, while the delivery for the public sector relies more, than before, on resource sharing and networking with academic and public libraries. Except perhaps for the TIB Hannover, the declining importance of grey literature points towards their changing role – less intermediation, less acquisition and collection development and more high-value services, more dissemination and preservation capacities designed for the scientific community needs (research excellence, open access, data management, etc.). Originality/value – The paper is a follow-up study of two surveys published in 2006 and 2009.

Highlights

  • The last decade was a period of major changes and challenges for academic libraries and scientific and technical information (STI) centres

  • The handling of grey literature may be a good indicator for these transformations in so far as it is not driven by the financial interests of commercial publishing

  • Korean Institute of Scientific and Technical Information (KISTI) did not respond in due time so that for them our analysis is limited to open sources

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Summary

Introduction

The last decade was a period of major changes and challenges for academic libraries and scientific and technical information (STI) centres. What STI centres do with grey literature reveals strategic choices as well as public policies regarding scientific documentation. In 2005, we conducted a first survey on the handling of grey literature by five major document suppliers, with special attention to holdings, services and projects in the emerging environment of open access (Boukacem-Zeghmouri & Schöpfel 2006). Was more or less a small part of the overall activity but the survey revealed different and divergent approaches and developments, especially regarding open access projects related to grey literature. A follow-up study with the same “big five” STI centres conducted four years later confirmed these differences. In 2008, the five centres supplied together 2.45 million items, with nearly 250,000 grey literature (9%), a slight increase in percentage compared to the first survey.

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