good morning! pic.twitter.com/PC5qAOxNaD
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
attention all #LIBER2019jog: park is still closed! we'll start at the north west corner at fusellier's arch down st stephen's green, do a round over there and back.
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
here we go! #LIBER2019 🙂 pic.twitter.com/iReOB5miXF
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
[hrmpf, this tweet hadn't been sent this morning.] at the moment it's four of us. 🙂 #LIBER2019jog pic.twitter.com/LqezbBqlMO
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
I'm on the workshop on #openaccess #books in #academiclibraries. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/j33ErWAsd8
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
our "research question" today: "what can libraries do to foster the growth of #openaccess to long-format research outputs such as books?" pic.twitter.com/e6ItzuRyOR
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
first talk by @eferwerda on #openaccess #books and academic libraries. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/GzVGrJ8CcZ
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the knowledge exchange (@knowexchange) website on #openaccess #monographs/#books: https://t.co/gFZuhRY8cd #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
biggest users of @OAPENbooks: germany and the US! #openaccess #books #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/IcDUU2zLOt
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the report by @SpringerNature eelco talks about: "The future of open access books: Findings from a global survey of academic book authors" https://t.co/3abTmPZvjx #LIBER2019 #openaccess #books
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
some conclusions and some "signs of growing momentum" of #openaccess #books #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/XL33KPEse6
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
.@eferwerda briefly presents HIRMEOS: https://t.co/5tx9kPI8lL @hirmeos and ScholarLed / COPIM: https://t.co/LiOSuzkSub @ScholarLed. they are both community driven and strive for collaboration instead of competition. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
gaps in the transition to #openaccess #books: problems with DOIs, with metadata, and with distribution. @eferwerda calls out to libraries to "set free" marc21 data for ebooks! #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/SssI0QSBx4
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
hm, I just realized that the twitter handle is missing! will add it later. 🙂 #LIBER2019 #conferencebadge
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the main function of the new infrastructures: hosting, dissemination, discovery, and quality assurance. #openaccess #books #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/czlOIpmcYt
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
some recommendations for libraries to support #openaccess #books: eg. support OA policies, repurpose budgets, include OA resources in discovery systems, provide OA advocacy, develope OpenBPCs, take an integral approach. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/wPfqVnMHe9
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
some final points for consideration. @SofieWennstrom asks @eferwerda whether we need more studies? his answer: we need to know what's going on, so we have to monitor #openaccess #books and #monographs. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/R4VsNzVz9V
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
now @SofieWennstrom presents the results of a survey about #openaccess #books/#monographs done among mostly LIBER libraries. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
here are some figures from the results of the #openaccess #books #survey done on behalf of @LIBEReurope. the full data set will be published soon! #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/RD9SHtEIjU
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
there are several challenges regarding funding, production, and strategies/policies of/for #openaccess #books. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/54uLV7r4Ta
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
… but there are also some opportunities! 🙂 #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/fiKR8xRrZp
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
for the question "what now?" @olafsiegert now presents some of the opportunities to support #openaccess #books as a library. e.g. for collection development: OA books as part of the library aquisition and in library catalogues/discovery systems. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
for publication services e.g.: include OA books in your institutional policy, provide publishing services, distribute books via your repository, provide institutional/library funding for OA books, support your authors with technical advice or negotiating contracts … #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
… and monitor the OA output of your institution. for development of staff and organisation e.g.: provide opportunities for skills development of your library staff on scholarly publishing in general, copyright, OA business models, metadata + format requirements … #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
…. and for the organisational development: e.g. take an integrated approach to content management, acquistion, and publication services, intergrate internal workflows from different departments. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
I think that with the chart from @eferwerda and the "regrouping"/"rephrasing" by @OlafSiegert libraries have a good "pool of ideas" to support #openaccess #books/#monographs. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
coffee break now, then a break-out session with group working on different aspects of #openaccess #books. I will be back with the group presentations later. 🙂 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
this is what we are doing now. 🙂 #openaccess #Books #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/CyjaY44qIa
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
in the reports of the four groups several interesting aspects are collected now regarding good examples of what is already done and — a longer list 🙂 — what we would like to do / to be done to support/push #openaccess #books. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the entries on the wish list are plenty, but also quite consistent over the four groups. the aspects will be collected and reported/published by the @LIBEReurope working group for #openaccess #books. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
matthijs van otegem wrapping up the workshop now: there is a lot already being done, but there are also many possibilities to start or go on with. — thanks to my "discussion group" including @jeroenson, matthijs, and two colleagues from sweden and france! #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
lunch break now! 🙂 #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/UidDO875vb
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
#offtopic: as a #tea drinker I am very happy that there is "proper tea" served in large quantities! sometimes it's difficult to get it on conferences … #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/QZeUiWk0U3
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
regarding drinks: @LIBERconference @LIBEReurope what about a reusable mug with the LIBER logo sold at the next conference? perhaps with sponsor support, to keep the costs down? would be a good "conference souvenir" — and save a lot of paper cups! #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/QWR3c811JV
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
Cool to see my graphic in a presentation 🙂 #openaccess #Books https://t.co/w8DpUlb0sT
— Ronald Snijder (@ronaldsnijder) June 26, 2019
official opening ceremony now. speaking among others: helen shenton, librarian and college archivist @tcddublin & @tcdlibrary. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/IILI6kWgFg
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
"In the age of fake news and information overload, #libraries have never been so important. Let's stand up for research libraries," says Helen Shenton of @tcdlibrary during #LIBER2019 opening ceremony
— LIBER Europe (@LIBEReurope) June 26, 2019
Chair of CONUL, @cathalmccauley giving a warm welcome in Irish #LIBER2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 26, 2019
And we are live from #LIBER2019 at https://t.co/3WJWGDQUwV!
— LIBER Conference (@LIBERconference) June 26, 2019
Next stop…. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/qYlGfawXPo
— Maurice Vanderfeesten @maurice_@akademienl.social (@maurice_) June 26, 2019
Results from the @LIBEReurope #oaworkinggroup Putting together the good examples and wish-lists for how libraries can work with #oabooks (or #oamonographs) #liber2019 – watch this space for a post-conference update with all the material we gathered pic.twitter.com/fyoLHLgMzC
— Sofie Wennström (@SofieWennstrom) June 26, 2019
For fun I deliberately applied the FAIR principles in an overly literal way to https://t.co/JpxfsSqwlQ and found that not all FAIR sub-bullets are created equal(ly) applicable. https://t.co/nE6yUrEcIg #LIBER2019 PS: I have a weird idea of 'fun'
— Juliane Schneider @JulianeS@glammr.us (@JulianeS) June 26, 2019
Matthijs van Otegem from @erasmusuni library summarizes the workshop: “we don’t have to wait until Plan S comes with guidelines. A lot is happening already”.
Call for collaboration! And @LIBEReurope can take an active role in this. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/gXBPjt2mR9
— Jeroen Sondervan (@jeroenson) June 26, 2019
First mention of #PlanS and I now think I should have brought some bingo as always. #LIBER2019
— Patricia Herterich (@PHerterich) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143858172794462208
Wednesday’s keynote for #LIBER2019 at 13:30 is being given by @TCDdeanresearch of @tcddublin, Prof. Linda Doyle. Prof. Doyle is a strong advocate for #OpenAccess, #OpenScholarship and #OpenScience pic.twitter.com/VGwOPf3y7v
— LIBER Conference (@LIBERconference) June 26, 2019
Indeed well deserved. @LIBERconference volunteers have been brilliant so far with a really hectic morning and attendees like me who have no clue where to go! #LIBER2019 https://t.co/4q97g7obIr
— Patricia Herterich (@PHerterich) June 26, 2019
a nice idea: there will be some #graphicrecording during the conference by https://t.co/4T0lYmcIqO. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/7OHV7JAMxY
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
All #LIBER2019 presentations are available at Zenodo here: https://t.co/OwSOc5RWYm
— Masud Khokhar (@mkhokhar) June 26, 2019
#LIBER2019 live stream https://t.co/nDCSsNqMZy https://t.co/nDCSsNqMZy
— Mitja V. Iskrić @mitja_i@toot.si (@mitja_i) June 26, 2019
#researchmatters at @tcdlibrary and @tcddublin, says linda doyle, dean of research and professor of engineering and the arts at trinity college. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/d1otxJc9wH
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
The Scientific part of #liber2019 has started! pic.twitter.com/6tQTjMcF8O
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 26, 2019
Nu startar LIBER-konferensen på fantastiska Trinity College Dublin. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/qpfaFV5IA4
— Lisa Petersen (@lisa_pete) June 26, 2019
three example for "layers" of citizenscience: "zoouniverise" https://t.co/PYder9zPeX, "ask for evidence" https://t.co/lR0tBDXFKV and research at trinity about ageing: https://t.co/IqxxCZqqC9 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143863077458329600
The biggest shift that is happening in research is FOR + WITH society. Our collaborators are being increasingly diverse and we need to engage with them in different ways. #LIBER2019
— Masud Khokhar (@mkhokhar) June 26, 2019
3rd example: TILDA research in Trinity @tilda_tcd #liber2019
— The Library of Trinity College Dublin (@tcdlibrary) June 26, 2019
Big shift is from research 'for' society to research 'with' society, highlighting @the_zooniverse, which is always mentioned in these discussions – does this mean the change is less widespread in practice than the shift in rhetoric? #LIBER2019
— Rosie Higman (@RosieHLib) June 26, 2019
.@TCDdeanresearch talking about empowering entire communities and citizens to engage with and in research #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/sbOckVgkmb
— Alan Carbery (@acarbery) June 26, 2019
a book recommendation by linda: "networks of new york: an illustrated field guide to urban internet infrastructure" https://t.co/HAfxyxWDmO #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143865212396814336
Oh no, is Linda going to blow the lid on the #Amazon #Echo #anatomy #AI #Liber2019 pic.twitter.com/IyLkbhjjhs
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 26, 2019
another example linda mentioned regarding "the hidden structure" and "there is nothing that is neutral" [simplified]: the "camden bench" https://t.co/YDBbPxoReS #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
“There’s no such thing as neutral design” says Linda Doyle at #LIBER2019. Good topic to address to librarians, as our collections and even our digital collections are not neutral and we need to be aware of this and act on that!
— Lotte Wilms (she/her) (@Lottewilms) June 26, 2019
Social laws are being built into our lives and environments, for example in smart cities and software – “code is law” @lessig – cf the Camden Bench which makes 23 different behaviours impossible incl sleeping which is an implicit attack on homelessness #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 26, 2019
A consequence of smart living and technological change is that social laws are being written on this basis. There is a danger of lack of neutrality in our approach. A really good quotation is "Code is Law" from Lawrence Lassig. #LIBER2019
— Masud Khokhar (@mkhokhar) June 26, 2019
Wow. @TCDdeanresearch points to incredible powerful project 'Anatomy of an AI system ' on 'The Amazon Echo as an anatomical map of human labor, data and planetary resources' https://t.co/ZrVrzyLWoV #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/JMT0T6QysZ
— Martijn Kleppe (@MartijnKleppe) June 26, 2019
Research WITH society requires a creative practice based approach: 1)making the invisible visible 2)there is no neutral design 3)give people a broader vocabulary to articulate their ideas & think differently 4)effect change #researchmatters #LIBER2019
— Dr Kirsten Mulrennan (@k_mulrennan) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143867569046265857
conclusion: "a lot done — more to do", to cite a former Irish election campaign. 🙂 #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/DZLZzYIYen
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
wow: the #graphicrecording of some aspects of linda's talk is already in! #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/sYhTXKn3PF
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
“Where does the library fit? At the heart of Open Scholarship, driving new ways of showing impact, accommodating creative outputs, influencing policy… it’s the most exciting time” @TCDdeanresearch #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143868920333557760
Doyle: “be disruptive, get a group of engaging scholars around you and start” #LIBER2019
— Jeroen Sondervan (@jeroenson) June 26, 2019
Great to see these projects discussed more widely — we're involved with both! #openinfrastructure #openbooks https://t.co/4r5RoJkfH2
— Open Book Publishers (@OpenBookPublish) June 26, 2019
This!! Be disruptive and don't wait until all the conservatives are on board with you. But we also need more good examples for Open Scholarship alternatives! #LIBER2019 https://t.co/oNu8HpvyBQ
— Patricia Herterich (@PHerterich) June 26, 2019
The change is underway in #OA with Linda's story about the @BTYSTE winning entry last year having HIS own publication on an open archive and citing this as 'NORMAL' (this competition is for 13-18 year olds in Irish schools) #LIBER2019
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 26, 2019
I am in the session about "the future of collections" now. @dm_cooper starting with "the future of academic library collections: the scholars' role". #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/a5YFxqu9S4
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
1/8 How can we support scholars' increasingly complex collecting habits? I'm presenting shortly @LIBERconference & sharing here for those who are following along from afar, the full @IthakaSR report co-authored with @OyaRieger here: https://t.co/rnPhAdxlKK #liber2019
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
2/8 My presentation builds off @IthakaSR findings on how scholars work with information in diverse fields, more on that program here: https://t.co/q5Tdymz8XH #liber2019
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
3/8 For the #liber2019 presentation I begin by defining and exploring what constitutes scholars' collections – what's crucial is the sheer variety of information types researchers are working with, it goes far beyond "data" … pic.twitter.com/shk8MnFikz
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
4/8 … I then highlight the challenges that scholars report facing when working with their collections #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/EyAT4nrxbv
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
5/8 I map out the stakeholders that are currently involved with supporting scholars as collectors and the gaps in these models #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/FdlZ6RJRt2
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
6/8 …and I note especially the potential risks to institutions that fail to support scholarly collecting #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/8lJRkcANWd
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143880549121036288
7/8 I conclude by sharing recommendations for how institutions can better support scholars as collectors #liber2019 pic.twitter.com/NZBTZyleAQ
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
8/8 I look forward to hearing perspectives from others at #LIBER2019 about how they are supporting scholars as collectors, particularly beyond research data management – any reactions to my & @OyaRieger 's full brief also much welcome! https://t.co/rnPhAdOX9k
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
Scholars and the communities they engage with drive library collection development @dm_cooper showing common social role in developing information infrastructures in religious studies of Sanskrit literature and engineers studying real-world materials data #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 26, 2019
Scholars ARE Collectors @IthakaSR https://t.co/qgaZfgdjwz in the age of "big data" much scholarship is still driven by "tiny data" … personal collections and non-linear workflows which enumerate a research domain, issues incl organising/storing/preserving/sharing #LIBER2019
— Ed Fay (@digitalfay) June 26, 2019
.@dm_cooper's recommendations for academic instiutions. #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/Wef6zVuIbp
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
has somebody in the audience caught the name of the app @dm_cooper has mentioned? #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
libraries should be more aware of and more involved with the "stuff" that scientists/scholars are collecting, to understand what is important for the scholars. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
a colleague from uppsala asks what about the quality, i.e. the "good enough-ness" of the metadata of those "private" collections. @dm_cooper: I was too slow to type your answer, perhaps you could repeat it here? thank you!! #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
I think that’s Tropy, https://t.co/oytc7uPqem.
— Michiel Cock (@MichielCock) June 26, 2019
I loved this question, I think about it a lot 🙂 The crux is that it can be scary to think of using the images that scholars deem good enough for their research but aren't as good as professional digitizations. I think it would be value from a discovery perspective…..
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
…to leverage these "good enough" images more than we currently do. It is so expensive to visit archives but also to digitize materials – I think that sharing the images scholars make when they visit archives could be really great. I think of it as "citizen archives."
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
now we learn about the Durham Residential Research Library, @ResearchDurham. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
Looking forward to Liz Waller @LizW63 and Judy Burg’s talk re promoting research collections @ResearchDurham through research fellowships in #specialcollections and #archives #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/OL5Gx8tv4H
— Dr Kirsten Mulrennan (@k_mulrennan) June 26, 2019
That's it! I'm obsessed with @tropy
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
the Library will be inaugurated in autumn 2019, and there will be a conference for that in september: https://t.co/QzSMO2Dtt8 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the strategic objectives: increase international research reputation, attract new collaborations, attract new deposits, opportunities for increasing grant income, geography. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
challenges for Durham RLL: distances, building sense of community in residential accomodation, different levels of capacity across partners and of focus on research, communication & co-ordination. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
has it been worth it so far? yes! increased use of collections, closer relationships and collaborations with researchers, collection knowledge, discoveries, advocacy and recognition. #DurhamRLL @ResearchDurham #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
here are some links for some more background of @ResearchDurham: https://t.co/Px3aMYqpsl & https://t.co/L6lrDihoz4 & https://t.co/cWX3STdhTk & https://t.co/JvAdKgRccO #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
now we'll hear something about the CollEx Persée Network. while we are waiting for somebody to fix the presentation laptop, here's the link to the network's website: https://t.co/xsjvbs2DC6 🙂 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143892383773450242
CollEx is an infrastructure dedicated to digitization and DH, a network of 19 research libraries and 4 national stakeholders, adding up to 140 labelled collections (new applications currently under review). #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the shared ambition is to facilitate access to and use of collcetions by researchers and to involve libraries into the research process, with a focus on collections as research materials. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
so it's a multi-purpose consortium; digitization, acquisition, collection mapping, longterm preservation (print & digital), document delivery. in 2018 41 projects have been funded by an overall budget of 1.6m euros. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
CollEx works on 3 "axes": support the production and dissemination of digitized corpora, carry out multidisciplinary programs of national scope, and promote the library as a place for research and expertise. #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
one type of projects: cartopgraphy, the link that was given doesn't seem to work: https://t.co/eaxmozOAdn — or did I type it wrongly? #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
the focus in the next years: long term preservation of digital/digitized content, an operational web solution to improve the visibility of the collections … and a third point I was too slow to type. 🙂 #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
we finish this session with a lightning talk about "curating for every audience: the library of trinity college dublin exhibition of political cartoons": https://t.co/ffHCnH3n4c / https://t.co/W0PMVHUikX #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
What’s good? Working with librarians. What do we need to do? Work with other people that aren’t librarians #LIBER2019 #fosteringthefutureofcollections pic.twitter.com/iXiIszKJ6M
— Jesse Waters (@jessewaters061) June 26, 2019
Last but not least, a lightning talk on current exhibition of political cartoons @tcdlibrary for #LIBER2019, focusing on audience engagement ⚡️ must catch this before I head home! https://t.co/Y0ahDygpRS
— Dr Kirsten Mulrennan (@k_mulrennan) June 26, 2019
the hashtag for this exhibition: #TCDtoons. https://t.co/afnyscWFYe #LIBER2019
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
heard at #LIBER2019 : why should we do this ?
because… it’s fun.
it’s indeed a good reason !— Antoine Masson (@youmi_amasson) June 26, 2019
Hello, it's https://t.co/1ufSLCKWMT
— COLLEX-PERSEE (@COLLEX_IR) June 26, 2019
Hello. It's "Concerted purchasing and licensing of specific electronic resources" 😉 !
— COLLEX-PERSEE (@COLLEX_IR) June 26, 2019
"concerted purchasing and licensing of specific electronic resources"
— Nathalie Fargier (@nfargier) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143900100411953153
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1143948206604242944
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144026100802183168
Sunset over Dublin#LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/bmMR0JF9nw
— Dr. Barry Houlihan (@stagedreaction) June 26, 2019
The finale – wow! What brilliant entertainment, thank you#LIBER2019 @LIBERconference #irishdancing @MansionHouseDub pic.twitter.com/CZOfCQxGjb
— CONUL Conference (@CONULconf) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144026530907140096
When in Ireland – Riverdance and Guiness….#LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/afNVgB6YQn
— kirsty lingstadt (@klingstadt) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144026620463931393
Dispatch from the European library conference circuit: the messenger bag is trending over the classic tote #LIBER2019 #uxlibs pic.twitter.com/FshfnEDmlh
— Danielle Miriam Cooper (she/her) (@dm_cooper) June 26, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1144028928144826368
good night everybody! #LIBER2019 pic.twitter.com/Nd8Njy1Exr
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) June 26, 2019
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