Evidence Summary
Developing Countries Lag Behind the US and UK in
Contributing to Institutional Repository Literature
A Review of:
Bhardwaj, R. K. (2014). Institutional repository literature: A
bibliometric analysis. Science
&Technology Libraries, 33(2), 185-202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0194262X.2014.906018
Reviewed by:
Heather Coates
Digital Scholarship & Data Management Librarian
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
(IUPUI)
University Library
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States of America
Email: hcoates@iupui.edu
Received: 27 Feb. 2015 Accepted: 21 Apr.
2015
2015 Coates.
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Abstract
Objective – Quantify the IR
literature across the world by identifying countries with relatively high
concentration of articles, describing the distribution of the literature by
language, author (institutional and individual), journal, and examining
characteristics such as the transformative activity index, and authorship and
citation patterns.
Design – This exploratory
study of the literature used several bibliometric research methods to describe
patterns and identify highly represented articles, authors, institutions, and
journals.
Setting – The Library and
Information Science Abstracts database.
Subjects – 436 articles from
118 journals.
Methods – Research articles
and review papers published through December 31, 2012, were identified by
searching Library and Information Science Abstracts (LISA). Citation data for
the 436 articles selected was gathered from LISA and Scopus.
Main Results – The 436 articles
from 118 journals had publication dates from 2001 through 2012, originated from
68 countries in 19 languages, and had authors affiliated with 159 institutions.
The greatest number of institutional repository articles were published in 2011
while year-to-year growth was greatest from 2005-2006. Most highly represented
were the United States and the United Kingdom, followed by India, Australia,
and Spain.
Twenty
publishers were responsible for nearly half of the selected articles. The top
four journals included OCLC Systems &
Services, D-Lib Magazine, Serials Review, and Library Hi Tech. D-Lib
Magazine alone published seven of the top 20 most cited articles. While
most articles were written by a single author, the majority of the multiple
author articles came from developed countries. Citation analysis reveals that
the 436 articles were cited 2,071 times, for an average of 4.8 citations per
article. However, 147 articles received no citations. The five most prolific
authors were Elizabeth Yakel, Kim Jihyun, Karen Markey, Jingfeng Xia, and
Sarika Sawant.
Conclusion – The author concludes
that developing countries lag behind in establishing and publishing on
institutional repositories and suggests that more authors will deposit in IR in
the future. A proposed role for LIS professionals is to communicate the
objectives, values, and principles behind institutional repositories.
Commentary
This
study offers an international perspective in a body of literature that tends to
focus on Western institutions and practices. The author attempts to broadly
characterize the global IR literature. While the findings are novel, the reader
is left to interpret their consequence without guidance from the author.
Repository management as an evolving area of librarianship, changing
institutional contexts, dramatic improvements in storage and discovery
technologies, and the relationship between IR literature and practice in
establishing and managing IR are not explored. The IR literature is not an
appropriate proxy for the establishment and usage of institutional repositories
across diverse national, academic, and library settings. The author appears to
confuse the growth of institutional repositories with the growth of the IR
literature and presents no evidence for the growth and expansion of such
repositories.
Though
the author provides an ambitious list of study objectives, the methods section
is truncated. It excludes crucial information about the methods used that is
necessary to ascertain the validity of these results. More specifically, key
details of the search terms were omitted, such as the search date range and the
timeframe for conducting the searches. The search string itself was overly
basic and may have excluded articles about platforms other than dSpace,
Greenstone, and E-prints. Furthermore, it is difficult to perform a critical
appraisal of the findings without knowing the criteria applied during the
screening and selection process. These gaps leave the reader questioning how
well this sample captures the institutional repository literature.
The
results consist largely of descriptive statistics, which reveal some
interesting trends. Unfortunately, the author does not delve into relationships
between the variables. By emphasizing the educational role of librarians in
helping users to deposit and use repositories, the author minimizes significant
shifts in the scholarly communication ecosystem that have driven the expansion
of IR. Although they serve other purposes than mechanisms for open access, the
motivation and context for presenting IR has largely been to rectify unequal
access and preserve the scholarly record. This gap is apparent in the
literature review and bibliography, where key concepts and publications are
missing. Charles Bailey’s thorough bibliography on institutional repositories
(2011) is an excellent resource that could have provided much needed structure
and context for exploring the practical implication of these findings.
Despite
the shortcomings, repository managers may find this broad account of the IR
literature useful for positioning their own scholarship, within the global
literature. Future studies could extend this work to explore the particularly
issues and challenges in repository management and associated services as the
field has developed over time. Such information would be invaluable in
understanding how institutional repository services respond to emerging
technologies and the challenges facing higher education.
References
Bailey, C. W. (2011). Institutional
repository bibliography, version 4. Houston: Digital Scholarship. Retrieved
from http://www.digital-scholarship.org/irb/irb.html