Editorial

Peter te Boekhorst & Ulrike Scholle

At the moment there is almost no university across Europe where the question of electronic dissertations is not discussed. Students are quite keen on having their dissertation published in digital form, since new multimedia techniques of presenting their research results as well as an improved availability make this publication form particularly attractive. Consequently, the university libraries, which traditionally have collected the printed versions of these research papers, are facing a new challenge. As was to be expected the discussion triggered off a heated debate on the value of the dissertation as a research product. Furthermore, a considerable number of problems is inextricably bound up with the new development:

Our special issue on this topic is an attempt at showing how these problems are being tackled in various European countries.




LIBER Quarterly, Volume 10 (2000), 5, No. 1