2006
DOI: 10.1007/11931584_67
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Institutional Repositories in India: A Case Study of National Aerospace Laboratories

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Now, while organisations such as UNESCO are developing an existing mandate on guaranteeing universal access to information in the fight against COVID-19 (UNESCO 2020), some academics may be hesitant to initiate open accessibility due to concern of disrupting excellent ties with their publishers (Adolphus 2009). In this situation, an institution should promote the building of OAIRs as an essential mandate to digitally archive the intellectual product created by the faculty, research staff, and students of the institution and freely accessible to end users both within and outside of the institution (Narayana, Biradar, and Goudar 2006). But still, there is a need to conduct various awareness programs about OAIRs to attract more users, especially the students and teachers.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Now, while organisations such as UNESCO are developing an existing mandate on guaranteeing universal access to information in the fight against COVID-19 (UNESCO 2020), some academics may be hesitant to initiate open accessibility due to concern of disrupting excellent ties with their publishers (Adolphus 2009). In this situation, an institution should promote the building of OAIRs as an essential mandate to digitally archive the intellectual product created by the faculty, research staff, and students of the institution and freely accessible to end users both within and outside of the institution (Narayana, Biradar, and Goudar 2006). But still, there is a need to conduct various awareness programs about OAIRs to attract more users, especially the students and teachers.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rajashekar (Sahu and Parmar, 2006 (Narayana et al, 2006). These IRs have adopted the selfarchiving model and have been using the most popular open source software such as Dspace and GNU Eprints (Karmakar et al, 2010).…”
Section: Growth Of Open Access In Indiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore was the first institution in the India to set up an interoperable IR (ePrints@IISc), under the leadership of the late Dr T.B. Rajashekar (Sahu and Parmar, 2006 (Narayana et al, 2006). These IRs have adopted the selfarchiving model and have been using the most popular open source software such as Dspace and GNU Eprints (Karmakar et al, 2010).…”
Section: Growth Of Open Access In Indiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ideal shape of envelope should have higher volume to surface area ratio, lowest drag coefficient. Various shapes of envelope profiles such as NPL [7], GNVR [8] and Zhiyuan [9] were studied based on their envelope geometry, surface area, volume, volume/surface area and diameter for the same length. The conclusions from the studies are inferred as below.…”
Section: Envelope Shape Comparisonmentioning
confidence: 99%