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'''DAREnet''' stands for '''Digital Academic Repositories''' and is an initiative by the Dutch organisation Surf. The DARE programme is a joint initiative by the [[List of universities in the Netherlands|Dutch universities]] and the [[National Library of the Netherlands]], the [[Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences]] (KNAW) and the [[Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research]] (NWO) with the aim to store the results of all Dutch research in a network of so-called repositories, thus facilitating access to them. DAREnet can be visited at [http://www.narcis.info www.narcis.info]. In addition in May 2005 DARE started the '''Cream of Science''' [[open access]] project with an online library of 25.000 publications from 200 top Dutch scientists. Because some publishers have more stringent copyright restrictions (notably [[Reed Elsevier]]) than others, free online access is limited to approximately 60% of the library content. The main disadvantage of the database is that free online accessibility is not listed for each publication and will only become apparent when a click-through is attempted.
'''DAREnet''' stands for '''Digital Academic Repositories''' and is an initiative by the Dutch organisation Surf. The DARE programme is a joint initiative by the [[List of universities in the Netherlands|Dutch universities]] and the [[National Library of the Netherlands]], the [[Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences]] (KNAW) and the [[Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research]] (NWO) with the aim to store the results of all Dutch research in a network of so-called repositories, thus facilitating access to them. DAREnet can be visited at [http://www.narcis.info www.narcis.info]. In addition in May 2005 DARE started the '''Cream of Science''' [[Open access (publishing)|open access]] project with an online library of 25.000 publications from 200 top Dutch scientists. Because some publishers have more stringent copyright restrictions (notably [[Reed Elsevier]]) than others, free online access is limited to approximately 60% of the library content. The main disadvantage of the database is that free online accessibility is not listed for each publication and will only become apparent when a click-through is attempted.
In the final stage of the DARE programme an ambitious project called ''HunDAREd thousand'' was started. The aim was to upload 100,000 full-text objects into DAREnet within a year. The focus of this project was on the doctoral theses of young scholars. The aim of this '''Promise of Science''' project was to set up a national doctoral e-thesis gateway and populate it with 10,000 full-text e-theses before the end of 2006. The total annual production of doctoral theses in the Netherlands is around 2,500. In September 2006 Promise of Science was launched, and in January 2007 DAREnet also achieved DARE’s final goal, the HunDAREd thousand project. At the time DAREnet contained a total of 103,429 objects.
In the final stage of the DARE programme an ambitious project called ''HunDAREd thousand'' was started. The aim was to upload 100,000 full-text objects into DAREnet within a year. The focus of this project was on the doctoral theses of young scholars. The aim of this '''Promise of Science''' project was to set up a national doctoral e-thesis gateway and populate it with 10,000 full-text e-theses before the end of 2006. The total annual production of doctoral theses in the Netherlands is around 2,500. In September 2006 Promise of Science was launched, and in January 2007 DAREnet also achieved DARE’s final goal, the HunDAREd thousand project. At the time DAREnet contained a total of 103,429 objects.
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Revision as of 13:27, 22 April 2009

DAREnet stands for Digital Academic Repositories and is an initiative by the Dutch organisation Surf. The DARE programme is a joint initiative by the Dutch universities and the National Library of the Netherlands, the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) with the aim to store the results of all Dutch research in a network of so-called repositories, thus facilitating access to them. DAREnet can be visited at www.narcis.info. In addition in May 2005 DARE started the Cream of Science open access project with an online library of 25.000 publications from 200 top Dutch scientists. Because some publishers have more stringent copyright restrictions (notably Reed Elsevier) than others, free online access is limited to approximately 60% of the library content. The main disadvantage of the database is that free online accessibility is not listed for each publication and will only become apparent when a click-through is attempted. In the final stage of the DARE programme an ambitious project called HunDAREd thousand was started. The aim was to upload 100,000 full-text objects into DAREnet within a year. The focus of this project was on the doctoral theses of young scholars. The aim of this Promise of Science project was to set up a national doctoral e-thesis gateway and populate it with 10,000 full-text e-theses before the end of 2006. The total annual production of doctoral theses in the Netherlands is around 2,500. In September 2006 Promise of Science was launched, and in January 2007 DAREnet also achieved DARE’s final goal, the HunDAREd thousand project. At the time DAREnet contained a total of 103,429 objects.

From 1 January 2007, at the completion of the DARE programme, KNAW Research Information has taken over responsibility for the DAREnet portal with the intention to integrate DAREnet with the Dutch Research Database (NOD) into the scientific portal NARCIS.

On 2 June 2008, DAREnet has been incorporated into the NARCIS science portal (www.narcis.info). At the moment, NARCIS is divided into four sections:
- The main NARCIS section: Search for data on researchers, research organisations and current (or recently concluded) research projects at all Dutch universities and research institutes. You can also search the more than 2,100 datasets that make up the DANS Electronic Archiving System (EASY). This section also gives you access to the full-text publications in DAREnet.
NARCIS is further divided into three sub-sections:
- DAREnet: Search exclusively for full-text publications from all Dutch universities, the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research, and other research institutions.
- Cream of Science: The familiar publication lists of 217 leading researchers, consisting of almost 50,000 documents. Approximately 60 percent of the publications are available in full-text versions and can be downloaded via NARCIS.
- Doctoral theses: The Promise of Science provides access to approximately 20,000 full-text doctoral theses from all Dutch universities.

In addition to these four sections, NARCIS is updated every hour with the latest science news flashes from various sources, including universities and other academic information providers (Intermediair, Science Guide and Elsevier). An RSS-feed function will keep you up to date on the latest full-text publications and datasets and the most recent research in your field of interest.

NARCIS was developed by the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), with assistance from SURFfoundation, the key ICT partnership in higher education and research. Plans are to continue expanding NARCIS in the years ahead. NARCIS's content is created in close cooperation with Dutch scientific and scholarly institutions.