The Evolving Institutional Repository Landscape: Mature Institutional Repositories, Profiles of USU and IWU’s Digital Commons
Sponsored by Taylor & Francis
Recorded on 05/23/2018
Posted in The Authority File
Episode 44
In this third episode of our series on institutional repositories, Illinois Wesleyan University’s Stephanie Davis-Kahl and Utah State University’s Dylan Burns describe how their IRs are currently structured and how they are opening up new collaborative opportunities. At USU, for example, the physics department has been especially active with the IR, going so far as to use it for their personal websites to display their lab work, pre-prints, posters, and presentations. At Illinois Wesleyan, Davis-Kahl notes that the inclusion of faculty governance documents has become a “really useful way of learning about the institution, understanding what discussions have been the most contentious or the most important in the institution’s history, and, more importantly, it’s really helped to communicate to the faculty and administration what an IR is capable of doing.”

Judy Luther
Professionally active in the scholarly publishing community, she is frequently found in meetings that focus on industry initiatives and emerging topics. She co-led the NISO Working Group that created SERU (Shared Electronic Resources Understanding) and initiated the Juried Product Development Forums for the Charleston Conference.
A Past President for the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP), and a chef in the Scholarly Kitchen. She serves on the editorial boards of UKSG Insight, Journal of Electronic Publishing, The Charleston Advisor, Against the Grain, and Learned Publishing. Judy has an Executive MBA (Emory University) and an MLS (Florida State University).

Dylan Burns
Dylan is the Digital Scholarship Librarian at Utah State University’s Merrill-Cazier Library, where he provides research support for the Languages, Philosophy, and Communication Studies department, and helps undergraduate and faculty scholars make their research available in an online, open access format. He also teaches research skills and supports research assignments in the classroom.

Stephanie Davis-Kahl
Stephanie Davis-Kahl is the Scholarly Communications Librarian and Professor at The Ames Library at Illinois Wesleyan University. She provides leadership for scholarly communication programs, including Digital Commons @ IWU. She is the liaison to the Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Economics, Educational Studies, Mathematics, Physics, Psychology, and Design, Entrepreneurship & Technology departments at IWU, and serves as the Managing Faculty Co-Editor of the Undergraduate Economic Review. She earned her BA in East Asian Studies from Oberlin College and her MS in Library Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. In 2014, she was named a Mover & Shaker by Library Journal and was also awarded the Education & Behavioral Sciences Section Distinguished Librarian Award.
About the Music:
The intro and outro music in The Authority File is “Grapes,” mixed by I dunno. The transition music is “Peace ( There’s A better Way ),” mixed by Loveshadow. The music is available on ccMixter, and is used under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license (cc-by 4.0).
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