Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 21st Dec 2025, 03:16:23pm GMT
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Session Overview |
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Session P: Developing curation tools and services
Paper session.
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One Platform, Many Pathways: Reducing Administrative Burden in RDM Through Service Integration Vrije Universitiet, Netherlands The administrative load on researchers is continuously growing. They are confronted with an increased demand to comply with administrative bureaucracy such as filling in Data management Plans (DMPs), Ethics forms, and much more. Most of these activities involve researchers filling in multiple forms, and sometimes these forms also require filling in the same information repeatedly. In the Netherlands, many universities are facing similar issues where the Research Data Management (RDM) landscape is getting diverse as more and more data management solutions are becoming available. Researchers are also confronted with several rules’ regulations and a wider formalization of RDM practices. This comes with new requirements around data management, including the requirement by funders to write a Data Management Plan. This paper presents the research data management platform developed at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU), designed to reduce the administrative burden for researchers through automated task flows. This provides guidance based on the research lifecycle and connects with support and topic-related support staff. With the Research Data Management Administration Platform (RDMA), VU Amsterdam created a solution that integrates curation, tools, and services within the research project process. In this paper, we describe the co-creation design process, the challenges involved in scaling across faculties, and the implementation of the platform. We reflect on the importance of tools like the RDMA platform and its impact on the reduction of administrative bureaucracy, whilst offering a model and support for institutions seeking to embed such systems. Digitally Preserving e-Theses: Challenges and Opportunities Loughborough University, United Kingdom The digital preservation of e-Theses presents several challenges. This is partly because the status of doctoral theses within the scholarly communication ecosystem is unclear. The shift from physical submission of theses to digital submission is also relatively new, spurred on by the Covid-19 pandemic. This paper is focused on policies, practices and workflows as they relate to e-Thesis submission and digital preservation. The research underpinning the paper is based on interviews, surveys and focus groups with doctoral colleges, institutional repositories and doctoral researchers within UK universities. | ||
