What are repositories and why are they useful?
02/09/2021

An open access repository is a digital repository where the content is freely available to download and reuse (sometimes with restrictions), where no login or subscription is required.
An institutional research repository is a digital repository for the storage of outputs from research undertaken at an organisation. They can be wholly open access repositories, closed access, or a mixture. Content that you might expect to find in an institutional research repository are: research papers, working papers, reports, datasets, and other digital objects resulting from research.
Collectively they store, preserve and provide access to a vast wealth of the world’s research output, and are free for us to use!
Examples of major repositories you might find useful:
CORE
The world’s largest collection of open access research papers.
DART
European e-theses portal giving access to theses from 320 universities from 19 European countries.
EThOS
The British Library’s Electronic Thesis Online Service.
OATD
Collection of 1.5 million open access theses and dissertations worldwide.
NDLTD
Theses and dissertations submitted to a number of universities in Africa, Australia, Europe, and North America.
Examples of subject-focused repositories:
arXiv
An open-access archive for scholarly articles in the fields of physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, quantitative finance, statistics, electrical engineering and systems science, and economics.
bioRxiv
Biological and biochemical sciences
Social Science Research Network (SSRN)
Research Papers in Economics (RePEc)
PubMed Central and Europe PMC – content in health and health-related sciences
To see an extensive list of open access repositories visit the global Directory of Open Access Repositories: OpenDOAR.
Don’t forget our own Cranfield repositories:
- PhD theses, staff papers, research data and more: CERES
- Master’s Theses: Master’s Theses Archive (for the Cranfield site) and Shrivenham Repository
Photo by Tobias Fischer on Unsplash
Categories & Tags:
Leave a comment on this post:
You might also like…
Come for Cranfield, stay for Milton Keynes: how Bucks, Beds and the OxCam region are just getting started
Heard the one about the entry-level job that needed three years of experience? Sadly we all have, and that’s why in a jobs market where practical, hands-on experience is so important, study where collaboration ...
British Standards and ISO standards demystified
We are frequently asked how to find ISO (International Standards Organisation) standards. The best way to find them is to go straight to our British Standards Online (BSOL) service. Why go to British Standards if you ...
All about standards
What are standards? Standards are documents outlining in detail the rules, guidelines or characteristics for specific products or processes. Standards may be a legal requirement or voluntary. Standards cover many sectors from engineering and business ...
Want to improve your reading skills?
Are you starting to read through the mountains of journals, books or articles for your project or on your course reading list? Let’s start with a few myths about the reading process: You need to ...
Driving the future of automotive excellence with three new scholarships
Cranfield University has a long history within the top echelon of motorsport, car development and safety designs within the automotive industry, working in the era where we’ve seen significant safety improvements, engineering feats and ...
Academic writing and being critical
Academic writing is daunting. Capturing all your thoughts and analysis and putting them down onto paper in some sort of understandable fashion is a challenge. Did you know we have resources in our Cranfield Study ...
