The Toolkit was designed to provide its users with a basic understanding of scholarly communication issues in the context of their impact upon libraries. For every issue covered here, users will find a brief introduction to the issue along with links to additional resources that have been curated and reviewed for relevancy, currency, and accuracy. Users will also find various tools, presentations, handouts and other takeaways that they can utilize as they develop their own local resources. Users are also welcome to use portions of this Toolkit LibGuide to populate their own local LibGuides.
Reuse of all materials is subject to:
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
We encourage contributions to the Toolkit from its users and the academic law library community. If you have a tool or resource that is valuable for advocacy and to the discourse of scholarly communication, please share it. This may include a paper, presentation, handout, video, or other types of useful material.
Email your contributions to the Scholarly Communication Toolkit Editing Team. Creators will retain copyright to all materials accepted. We ask you to explicitly allow others to copy, distribute, or modify materials for local use or educational purposes with attribution by selecting a Creative Commons license for your contribution.
The ALL-SIS Scholarly Communication Toolkit is produced by the ALL-SIS Scholarly Communication Committee (formerly the Taskforce on Scholarly Communication) to support information sharing and support on scholarly communication issues.
The toolkit is an educational resource primarily directed to law librarians to assist them with integrating a scholarly communication perspective into law library operations and programs; and preparing presentations on scholarly communication issues for law school administrators, faculty, staff, students, or other librarians.
The Toolkit includes short overview essays on key scholarly communication issues and highly selective lists of other sources of information on these topics, and copies of presentations, handouts, and similar material.
All materials that are prepared for and directly part of the toolkit are made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike (CC-BY-NC-SA) license.
In 2021, the Scholarly Communications Committee created this LibGuide based on the ACRL Scholarly Communication Toolkit and the University of Maine School of Law's Scholarly Communications & Author's Rights Guide. This guide will continue to be updated and maintained by members of the AALL-SIS Committee's Toolkit Editing Team.
In 2003, ACRL defined scholarly communication as "the system through which research and other scholarly writings are created, evaluated for quality, disseminated to the scholarly community, and preserved for future use. The system includes both formal means of communication, such as publication in peer-reviewed journals, and informal channels, such as electronic listservs." Scholarly communication is frequently defined or depicted as a lifecycle documenting the steps involved in the creation, publication, dissemination, and discovery of a piece of scholarly research.
There are several actors or stakeholders present at the various stages in this lifecycle, including researchers, funders, peer reviewers, publishers, and, of course, libraries. Historically, the role of libraries in the scholarly communication lifecycle was confined to information consumer -- they collected and organized scholarly resources for discovery and use by others. However, technological innovation in production and dissemination of scholarship, challenges to traditional publishing practices concerning business models and intellectual property management, and efforts to increase access to scholarship have presented opportunities for libraries to leverage their services and expertise to advocate for and bring about positive change.
The ways in which libraries have innovated their services and programs and tapped into their collective expertise to become less of a mere consumer of scholarly resources and instead a prominent actor and information producer in the scholarly communication lifecycle include:
In this Toolkit, users will find information and resources to assist them in developing programs or enhancing current offerings aimed at these and other endeavors at their own libraries. Academic libraries are strategically positioned on account of existing relationships with publishers, faculty, researchers, authors, students, and administrators to be not only a resource but also a leader and change agent in the scholarly communication lifecycle, and we hope that content provided here assists libraries in achieving their strategic and programmatic goals.