Dear all,

In these deeply troubling times, we are nonetheless happy to announce that the 
OAPEN Library (www.oapen.org<http://www.oapen.org>) has moved to a new 
platform, based on DSpace<https://duraspace.org/dspace/>, the open source 
repository system. Together with the move to DSpace, we have renewed the 
website and implemented a new content management system. The move to DSpace is 
part of our mission to develop as an open, community-driven infrastructure 
service to support open access to monographs and edited volumes. The need for 
open infrastructures and global, open knowledge exchange in all scientific 
fields has never been more apparent.

OPERAS, DOAB and SCOSS
The move to DSpace is part of a wider project, OPERAS-P, to support the 
development of OPERAS<https://operas.hypotheses.org/> (Open Scholarly 
Communication in the European Research Area for Social Sciences and 
Humanities), which is funded by the European Commission in the Horizon 2020 
framework. The redevelopment also involves DOAB<https://www.doabooks.org/> (the 
Directory of Open Access Books), to secure both OAPEN and DOAB as open 
infrastructures, and DOAB as a central service for OPERAS. OAPEN and DOAB have 
also jointly been selected by SCOSS<https://scoss.org/> (the Global 
Sustainability Coalition for Open Science Services) to be supported by the open 
science community in its second funding cycle<https://sparceurope.org/7949-2/>.

The new platform
The new platform is developed with open source software, using DSpace for 
hosting the OAPEN Library collection and Strapi for the content management 
system (CMS). Strapi<https://strapi.io/> is a CMS licensed under the MIT 
License. DSpace<https://duraspace.org/DSpace/> is typically used for creating 
open access repositories for scholarly digital content, and is supported by a 
large and global user base. Our development partners are 
Atmire<https://www.atmire.com/> in Belgium (for DSpace) and 
Trilobiet<https://www.trilobiet.nl/> in the Netherlands (for the website and 
CMS). Our hosting partner is Huma-Num<https://www.huma-num.fr/>, the French 
national research infrastructure for the humanities and social sciences.

New features
With the migration to a new platform, we were able to introduce several new 
features and improve existing ones. We introduced new browsing options based on 
license or publication type (book or chapter), and improved our metadata 
offerings in MARCXML and MARC 21, based on feedback from libraries. We added a 
REST search API for systems to search the OAPEN Library.
A custom feature that we will make available as an open source addition to 
DSpace is ONIX import. Publishers use the ONIX XML standard to exchange 
information about their titles. We created an import script that converts ONIX 
XML to new records for the OAPEN Library in DSpace. The ONIX metadata now also 
contains chapter descriptions linked to books.

New features are being planned, and we hope to work with the community of 
DSpace users to develop more open source components going forward.


Kind regards,
Ronald Snijder, PhD

OAPEN Foundation
Prins Willem-Alexanderhof 5
PO Box 90407
2509 LK The Hague
The Netherlands

email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.oapen.org<http://www.oapen.org/>

ORCID: 0000-0001-9260-4941<https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9260-4941>
_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal

Reply via email to