Persistent identifiers are a key technology in enabling access and interoperability between systems involved in scholarly communication. This paper discusses persistent identifier strategies and services implemented at UNSW Library for institutional and faculty-based digital repositories. In particular, the paper describes the UNSW DOI Service, which is an application that allows researchers to request or mint DOIs. The service has been designed to meet multiple use cases, and reuses descriptive metadata to make the process of getting a DOI as simple and efficient as possible
Institutional repositories (IRs) play an important role in supporting open research practices by mak...
Persistent Identifiers or PIDs allow us to uniquely identify digital research resources like publica...
To embed the wider importance of building a connected infrastructure for open science, the technical...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) – for people (researchers), places (their organizations) and things (t...
This presentation was presented at SomaliREN Library Management and Open Science Workshop on 15/02/2...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are increasingly central to the operation of open scholarly infrastruc...
Research information is useful only if it can be shared—with other researchers, with research organi...
Research needs visibility and persistence in order to be found, cited and re-used. Registering persi...
This presentation, created for UCT Open Data Day 2019, focuses on the developing field of persistent...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) have been recognized as a crucial enabling component for 2020 e-scienc...
Research needs visibility and persistence in order to be found, cited and re-used. Registering persi...
This presentation held at Leiden University on June 22nd 2017 gives a short introduction to persiste...
The use of URLs to meet the challenges of permanent referencing of digital resources is not sufficie...
Persistent IDentifiers (PIDs), such as DOIs, Handles and ARK identifiers, play a significant role in...
Over the years, the social sciences have become increasingly data intensive. Hence, data repositorie...
Institutional repositories (IRs) play an important role in supporting open research practices by mak...
Persistent Identifiers or PIDs allow us to uniquely identify digital research resources like publica...
To embed the wider importance of building a connected infrastructure for open science, the technical...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) – for people (researchers), places (their organizations) and things (t...
This presentation was presented at SomaliREN Library Management and Open Science Workshop on 15/02/2...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) are increasingly central to the operation of open scholarly infrastruc...
Research information is useful only if it can be shared—with other researchers, with research organi...
Research needs visibility and persistence in order to be found, cited and re-used. Registering persi...
This presentation, created for UCT Open Data Day 2019, focuses on the developing field of persistent...
Persistent identifiers (PIDs) have been recognized as a crucial enabling component for 2020 e-scienc...
Research needs visibility and persistence in order to be found, cited and re-used. Registering persi...
This presentation held at Leiden University on June 22nd 2017 gives a short introduction to persiste...
The use of URLs to meet the challenges of permanent referencing of digital resources is not sufficie...
Persistent IDentifiers (PIDs), such as DOIs, Handles and ARK identifiers, play a significant role in...
Over the years, the social sciences have become increasingly data intensive. Hence, data repositorie...
Institutional repositories (IRs) play an important role in supporting open research practices by mak...
Persistent Identifiers or PIDs allow us to uniquely identify digital research resources like publica...
To embed the wider importance of building a connected infrastructure for open science, the technical...