2,014,200 research outputs found

    British Library UK DataCite Summer Meeting

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    Learn about how institutions and projects in the UK and internationally are using DataCite DOIs to enhance discovery and citation of content, along with recent and upcoming changes for DataCite users in the UK, with the recording of our 2020 Summer Meeting. This year’s speakers were: • Rachael Kotarski, British Library: British Library Research Services update • Jez Cope, British Library: British Library DataCite member update • Helena Cousijn & Robin Dasler, DataCite International: Providing Value to Consortia • Lorna Mitchell, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh: Persistent Identifiers as Independent Research Organisation (IRO) Infrastructure • Bosun Obileye, International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA): DataCite at IIT

    British Library open access policy for staff research outputs

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    The Living Knowledge vision of the British Library is to make our intellectual heritage accessible to everyone, for research, inspiration and enjoyment. An important element of this heritage is the research output of staff of the British Library. Therefore, the aim of this policy is to ensure the wider dissemination and long-term preservation of research outputs produced by British Library staff. This will improve discoverability and in turn raise the research profile of the British Library. The introduction of this policy allows the British Library to align with other UK research institutions and funders who have implemented open access policies in recent years

    British Library Persistent Identifier Policy

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    The purpose of this policy is to outline the approach to the use of identifiers and persistent identifiers (PIDs) in internal and external facing British Library systems, to define a consistent set of requirements for PIDs to use when managing and developing services and to articulate the responsibilities in applying and reviewing these principles

    The Annotated Amleth: Belleforest in the British Library

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    The account of Amleth in François de Belleforest’s Le Cinquiesme Livre des Histoires Tragiques is a recognized source for Shakespeare’s Hamlet. The British Library copy of the Lyon 1576 edition (C.8.a.5) bears various manuscript annotations which reveal an early reader’s approach to Belleforest’s text: one possible author of these annotations is Shakespeare himself

    Confiscated Nazi Books in the British Library

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    The British Library possesses eleven or twelve thousand books seized from German libraries and institutions between June 1944, when Anglo-American forces invaded western Europe, and 1947. Nearly half the confiscated books came from a single library, that of the German Army's Kriegsschule (known in the British Library as the Hanover Military Library) and were offered to the British Museum, the institution of which the present British Library was then a part, by Brigadier H. B. Latham on behalf of the Joint Intelligence Committee of the Cabinet and the Minister of Defence in July 1946. The books are largely dispersed throughout the BL collections. This article identifies books in the BL seized at the end of the War and which still bear the signs of ownership of German institutions

    British Library Research Report 2018-19

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    Welcome to our third annual Research Report, covering the academic year October 2018 to September 2019. Research is central to the work of the British Library, permeating what we do as an organisation and shaping what we are able to offer to all our users, collaborators and audiences. Reflecting on last year, I would normally highlight how we provide access to our collections and resources to researchers on site and online. As I write this during a global pandemic, when throughout lockdown researchers and public have been unable to use our physical spaces, it is particularly timely to signal how our own research also underpins growth in the remote discovery, access and use of our digital collections

    British Library Research Report 2017-18

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    The Library’s role as an Independent Research Organisation (IRO) is central to our research identity, supporting a thriving research culture and enabling us to lead and partner on high level research. The funding we receive feeds into all aspects of our vision, supporting learning, custodianship, business and international partnerships, and is central to enabling wide access to our collection by diverse audiences. The crucial contribution that research makes to our public engagement - particularly through our major exhibitions and learning programme - is highlighted in this report in a section illuminating the depth of investigation that was essential to producing our recent major exhibition, Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms: Art, Word, War. During the last year we have seen change and development both in the wider research landscape and within the British Library. We were delighted to host the launch event for UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) in the spring, which marks a significant change in how research excellence is delivered across the UK. At the Library, we have trialled and launched new programmes and opportunities, including two schemes to facilitate periods of in-depth research work by our staff. We highly value the chance to try new modes of research practice and the ability to offer staff a discrete period in which to apply themselves to their area of expertise has been especially gratifying. This report focusses on the externally-funded research that we have worked on with our partners both nationally and internationally. It includes the voices of our students and fellows, as well as those of our colleagues and partners. We are particularly grateful to the funders who have supported us over the last year to deliver research that strongly supports our role as a leading research library. As well as the formalised outputs and developments of our funded research, we hope to provide some insight into the wider impact of our research, offering examples of our engagement and practice that aim to share new knowledge with the wider research community and the public. We hope that this report will bring to life and celebrate British Library research over the past year

    British Library Research Report 2016-17

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    The British Library has always been a place where research happens. Academics, students and independent researchers alike use our Reading Rooms to undertake detailed study on topics from every disciplinary area, reflecting the national and international collections we care for. More recently, our users have been able to access an increasing body of digitised content, onsite and online, to enable efficient access and support new methodologies. Yet, we are more than simply a provider of sources for research. Our organisation takes an active role in research, nationally and internationally, as an important contributor to intellectual exchange and understanding. We are proud to count many scholarly experts amongst our staff, experts who themselves generate new knowledge through the research that they do both as research leaders and as collaborators. The Library’s role as Independent Research Organisation is central to its vision to make our intellectual heritage accessible to everyone. We partner with academia, industry and many other sectors to enrich scholarly understanding, develop new insights, support research capacity and training, and deliver new digital research resources and services. Our cultural programmes, exhibitions, community projects and learning activities engage and involve wider audiences – in person and online – with this research. This synergy is fundamental to our role in the global narrative that underpins the world’s knowledge

    A Hand-list of the Manuscripts in Burmese Collection in the British Library

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    This list contains about 1000 manuscripts from Myanmar (Burma) in the British Library originating from the British Museum collections, and contains not only manuscripts in Burmese but also Shan, Mon, and Arakanese. All items are identified and described based upon a physical examination of the manuscripts, and a collation of existing records. All the manuscripts with Egerton, Stowe, Sloane and Add. shelfmarks, and some of those with Or. shelfmarks, are also listed on the British Library’s online catalogue Explore Archives and Manuscripts

    Faber Music and Music Sales Publications 2013 to 2018

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    The ‘Faber Music and Music Sales Publications 2013 to 2018’ dataset is an .xlsx (Excel Workbook) file containing metadata describing 57,202 digital and printed music publications published by Faber Music and Music Sales between 2013 and 2018 and deposited at the British Library under legal deposit legislation. The data was generated by the British Library by means of a report (Report CM19.096tab) run on the library management system on 17 July 2019. It is also available on the British Library’s online catalogue: http://catalogue.bl.uk. The data is intended to accompany Amelie Roper's article 'From Print to Digital: First Steps in Collecting Digital Music Publications in UK Legal Deposit Libraries', published in the journal Alexandria in 2020. For further information, please contact [email protected]
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