Abstract

At Leiden University, it is increasingly recognised that effective data management forms an integral component of responsible research. To actively promote the stewardship of all the research data that are produced at Leiden University, a comprehensive, institution-wide programme was launched in 2015, which centrally aims to encourage its researchers to carefully plan the temporal storage, long-term preservation and potential reuse of their data. This programme, which is managed centrally by the Department of Academic Affairs, and which receives important contributions from academic staff, from Leiden University Libraries, and from the University’s central ICT organisation, basically consists of three parts. Firstly, a basic central policy has been formulated, containing clear guidelines for activities before, during and after research projects. The central aim of this institutional policy is to ensure that all Leiden-based research projects can effectively comply with the most common requirements stipulated by funding agencies, academic publishers, the Dutch standard evaluation protocol and the European data protection directive. As a second part of the data management programme, faculties have organised workshops and meetings, concentrating on the rationale and on the technical and organisational practicalities of effective data management in order to bring about a discipline-specific protocol. Data librarians employed by Leiden University Libraries have developed educational materials and provide training for PhDs in the principles and benefits of good data management. Thirdly, to ensure that scholars can genuinely make a reasoned selection among the many tools that are currently available, a central catalogue was developed which lists and characterises the most relevant data management services. The catalogue currently provides information about, amongst many other aspects, the organisations behind these services, the main academic disciplines which are targeted and the accepted file formats and metadata formats. The various aspects of these facilities have been classified using terminology provided by conceptual models developed by the UKDA, ANDS and the DCC. Using Leiden University’s policy guidelines as criteria, the overall suitability of each service has also been evaluated. Leiden University’s data management programme has a total duration of three years, and its basic objective is to offer a comprehensive form of support, in which the data management policy which is propagated centrally is complemented by various forms of assistance which ought to make it easier for scholars to adhere to this policy. The catalogue of data management services also aims to bolster the implementation of an adequate technical infrastructure, as the qualitative evaluations of the services enable policy-makers and developers to quickly establish gaps or other shortcomings within existing facilities.

Highlights

  • Stakeholders across the entire domain of scholarly publishing increasingly recognise that it is of crucial importance to ensure that research data can be curated carefully and responsibly, from the moment when they are created through to their dissemination

  • The experiences at Leiden University suggest that the success and the impact of data management policies depend, to a large extent, on the availability of ancillary activities that can promote the acceptance of such data management guidelines

  • One suggestion is to develop a central facility for the storage of all new data management plans

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Summary

Introduction

Stakeholders across the entire domain of scholarly publishing increasingly recognise that it is of crucial importance to ensure that research data can be curated carefully and responsibly, from the moment when they are created through to their dissemination. Publishers and academic institutions have collectively formulated a confounding number of requirements, and for researchers, it can be difficult to develop a data management strategy which is fully compliant with all of these different demands. In all the guidelines that have been considered, the initial data management paragraph needs to be expanded into a full data management plan (DMP) when the application is successful This DMP needs to contain detailed information about the data management environments that will be used, both during and after the completion of the research project. In the Netherlands, the Standard Evaluation Protocol, which was developed by NWO and the Dutch academic associations KNAW and VSNU, stresses that researchers need to take measures to secure the integrity of their research. PLOS has defined very similar rules for authors: it asks its authors to provide unrestricted access to all the data that underlie the findings which are discussed in articles, and recommends the use of repositories that demonstrably comply with ­sustainability and quality criteria, such as those formulated by the Research Libraries Group or the international Data Seal of Approval (PLOS, 2016)

Leiden University’s Research Data Policy
Stakeholder Involvement
A Catalogue of Data Management Services
Suitability of Data Management Services
Website About Data Management Services
Training and Education
Conclusion
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