Related to your search
Libraries
See all partner content
As vital partners in the University's research and learning ecosystem, Columbia University Libraries connects users with rich and distinctive collections, fosters meaningful learning experiences, and provides innovative research support for a large, diverse user population. The Libraries has an open-access policy and the research of its employees is featured here. https://library.columbia.edu/
Search Results
102. Ten Years of PubMed Central
103. A Book Online? No, An Online Book!
104. CDRS's Role as Promoter and Disseminator of Columbia Research
105. Chinese Local Gazetteers: Evolution, Institutionalization and Digitization
106. IF Only: Pushing the Limits of Impact Factor
107. Modeling Press-Library Collaboration in the Creation of an Online Book
108. Open Data and the Future of Funded Research
109. The Challenges of Accessibility
110. The Challenges of Expressing Parerga—Part 1
111. The Challenges of Expressing Parerga—Part 2
112. The Future of Learned Societies
113. What to Know About SEO
114. Why the Web-based Monograph?
115. Final Impact: What Factors Really Matter?
116. Future of the Book: Can the Scholarly Monograph Survive?
117. The Harvard Open Access Initiatives
118. Global Collaboration and the Future of the OCLC Cooperative
119. Chinese Oral History Collections at Columbia: Toward Better Access
120. Columbia University Libraries Strategic Plan, 2006-2009
121. Global Collaboration and the Future of the OCLC Cooperative
122. Open Access and Scientific Societies
123. Who Pays for Open Access?
124. Whose Copy? Whose Rights?
125. Columbia Libraries Strategic Plan, 2003-2006
126. The What and Whys of DOIs
127. HILCC: A Hierarchical Interface to Library of Congress Classification : a project report on the development of an operational prototype LCC-based subject interface.
128. The Online Books Evaluation Project at Columbia University Final Report
129. Digital Image Collections: Cataloging Data Model and Network Access
130. Bibliographic Control of Special Collections: Issues and Trends
131. Computer Technology as Applied to Rare Book Cataloguing
- « Previous
- Next »
- 1
- 2
- 3