We invite you to participate in increasing Japanese Open Access journals and monographs.
We collaborate with the Electronic Resources Database-Japan (ERDB-JP) of the National Institute of Informatics, Japan, by contributing the Open Access information to ERDB-JP to enhance discoverability of Japanese academic resources.
PLEASE FILL OUT THIS FORM!
Scope of Contents
The title information of either of the following e-resources can be registered:
·E-journals and e-books whose main language is Japanese; or
·E-journals and e-books whose editorial office or publisher is based in Japan
Metadata in ERDB-JP will be uploaded to the Community Zone (Freely Accessible Japanese Titles) in Alma, then accessed to the local library catalog by activation. Or it will be used in the format of KBART (Knowledge Bases and Related Tools).
ERDB-JP is a searchable database of OA resources.
This is also a pilot project to introduce ERDB-JP for you and your institution. We encourage you to discuss your own institution unit of Electronic Resource Access to register as a partner institution for ERDB-JP, and recommend OA resources in Japanese Studies to be included in ERDB-JP.
Please contact Keiko Hill for questions about this survey (khill5[at]uw.edu).
Keiko Hill (Japanese Cataloging Librarian/East Asian Serials and E-Resources Cataloging Librarian at UW) (Project announcement made on May 21, 2024)
The purpose of this project is the ongoing development of a comprehensive list of notable Japanese Studies collections held in North American libraries and academic institutions, including print materials, collections that are accessible electronically, and unprocessed or partially processed collections. The list is based on submissions by universities and academic institutions in North America.
New survey entries to the list will continue to be accepted indefinitely
You can also view and analyze the collections list using this website
Please contact Kevin McDowell for questions about this survey. kevinmc (at) uoregon (dott) edu
Identifying the strong subject areas of each Japanese collection in North America and coordinating access to them is another project of CCWG.