The Wikipedia Library/Newsletter/May-June 2022
In this issue we highlight new partners, a call for input on this newsletter, 1lib1ref and, as always, a roundup of news and community items related to libraries and digital knowledge.
New partners
[edit]The Wikipedia Library is announcing free, full-access, accounts for new partners:
- SAGE Journals American independent publisher with more than 1,000 journals
- Elsevier ScienceDirect over 2,500 journals, 900 serials and 26,000 book titles
- University of Chicago Press – academic publisher of journals in the humanities and social sciences.
- Information Processing Society of Japan – Japanese learned society for computing.
A number of existing partners have also moved to allow immediate access to all eligible editors, without requiring an application; these include Brill and NewspaperARCHIVE.com. To see which partners are available to you, visit your My Collections page.
Books & Bytes
[edit]This newsletter recently celebrated its 50th issue. This milestone offers an opportunity for reflection: how could or should Books & Bytes change to meet the needs of its readers?
- What topics do you like to see covered? What should be added or left out?
- How often should the newsletter come out?
- What else should change about Books & Bytes?
Have your say at meta.
#1lib1ref: May 2022 edition
[edit]An excerpt from the GLAM Newsletter
The May 2022 edition of #1Lib1Ref has come to a close with very interesting results. The campaign happened from May 15th to June 5th and it was an opportunity for people in the southern hemisphere to participate.
According to the Outreach Dashboard campaign, we were joined by 24 programs that gathered 520 editors. That is almost 100 more editors than last year!
We also had:
- 8.79K references added
- 1.82M words added
- 10.8K articles edited
- 1.48K articles created
- 1.2K Commons uploads
- 9.54K total revisions on Wikidata
This year's highlights will also go to the campaigns by AfLIA (1Lib1Ref African Librarians Week 2022) and by the Igbo Wikimedians User Group (1lib1ref cite-a-thon). AfLIA added 3.15K references alone and the user group added 1.44K.
This year, the May campaign managed to keep up with last year's stats, overcoming them by a small margin. In 2021, there were 24 programs, 428 editors, and 8.54K references added according to the Outreach Dashboard.
On the other hand, according to the overall stats on Wikipedia, the "#1Lib1Ref" hashtag was used less this year. We are still gathering this data and will update this page with the information soon.
Bytes in brief
[edit]- (English) Editathon at OYA Soichi Library, Japanese magazine library
- (English) SAGE Publishing Announces a New Free-to-Read Collection of Research that Explores Gender Equity and Justice
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