The UKSG 47th Annual Conference and Exhibition: Glasgow

The UKSG Annual Conference is a major event in the scholarly communications calendar which attracts delegates each year from around the world – librarians, publishers, content providers, consultants and intermediaries. The conference combines high-quality plenary presentations, lightning talks, workshops and breakout sessions with entertaining social events and trade exhibition.

When

Where

Venue Photos

Monday, April 8, 2024 – 08:00 BST
to
Wednesday, April 10, 2024 – 13:30 BST

Scottish Event Campus (SEC)
Glasgow, G3 8YW
United Kingdom

About the Event


You can access all of the conference photographs taken by Simon Williams Photography at the links below.  You are free to use and re-use these photographs in any format, commercial or otherwise.

Sunday: https://images.simonwilliamsphotography.co.uk/p348531333

Monday: https://images.simonwilliamsphotography.co.uk/p446577628

Tuesday: https://images.simonwilliamsphotography.co.uk/p340722794

Wednesday: https://images.simonwilliamsphotography.co.uk/p120411265


Sorry registration has closed for the UKSG this year.  Please don’t contact us with late bookings at this time as we will be unable to process them. There will be no on-site bookings so please do be considerate and not just turn up as we will have to say no. 

We look forward to welcoming everyone to Glasgow!


Please scroll down for the latest programme information.

Please click here to download a copy of the programme, do note this year, in an effort to minimise our environmental impact and reduce paper waste, printed copies will be strictly limited at the event. We strongly encourage you to download the event app for accessing the programme or print a copy of the PDF before you travel.


More information on how to get to the SEC can be found here

ScotRail offer a special discounted train ticket for delegates travelling between the city centre and the SEC by train. The Conference Rover costs just £5 for up to 5 days’ travel. More information.

The Glasgow Convention bureau also provide a booklet containing special delegate offers and discounts for a variety of local tours and restaurants – this can be found here


We’re committed to running accessible training and events. We want you to feel welcome, included, and able to fully engage in our sessions.

To help us, please share any access needs you have when prompted by our booking form. We may be in touch to ensure we’re making the right adjustments.   

Further information on access facilities for the city of Glasgow can be found here.


The conference app is now live please, all registered delegates will receive and email with details on how to download the app.  More detail can be found here.

The app includes information on:

  • community/networking pages including ice breaking area’s. 
  • sessions and speakers (build your own programme)
  • delegates lists
  • sponsors and exhibitors
  • maps
  • take part in  ‘The Passport Game’ with a chance to win £100 in vouchers
  • additional information/logistics
  • polls, Q&A, session chat 

UKSG and the SEC Campus put the safety of our attendees at the highest priority.  Safety and security measures are in place to provide reassurance to our visitors, for more information the SEC’s security measures please click here 

  • During the live event be aware that generally bags larger than A3 size (30cm x 42cm) are not permitted inside the conference area, a complimentary cloakroom will be provided for conference delegate’s use.  

A site map of the SEC can be found here 


We are working again with Content Online who have produced the sponsorship pack which you can find here: https://bit.ly/44T9p0J 


** All spaces for the exhibition are now fully booked. **

The list of our 2024 Exhibitors can be found here. The Exhibitor Manual can be found here (updated 7 December 2023)


Accommodation is not covered by the delegate fee.  The official online accommodation bookings service is now open – click here to view and book a range of hotels. Accommodation is sold on a first come, first served basis and the published rates will be available until 26 February. 

Map of Glasgow hotels.

Alternatively, you can book directly with Premier Inn, which is located a short walk across the river from the SEC.  

The Glasgow Convention bureau also provide a booklet containing special delegate offers and discounts for a variety of local tours and restaurants – this can be found here


Named in honour of John Merriman, in recognition of his work in founding both UKSG and NASIG, this prestigious award provides an invaluable opportunity for anyone keen to learn and share experiences from a very different angle.   For more detail and the application process can be found here.

In addition to the John Merriman award we also offer sponsored conferences places for: 

  • student
  • early career practitioners
  • underrepresented groups
  • scholarly information community

More details on these awards and bursaries can be found here.

The John Merriman award is supported by the generous sponsorship of Taylor & Francis Group and the early career professional awards are kindly sponsored by AIP PublishingFrontiers and Wiley.


Platinum Sponsors

Gala Reception Partner:

Gold Sponsors

Programme

  • Monday 8 April
  • Tuesday 9 April
  • Wednesday 10 April

Time

Programme

Speakers

08.00


10.30

Presentation of the John Merriman UKSG Award presented Taylor & Francis


(Award Sponsored by Taylor and Francis and provides free attendance at both UKSG and NASIG in the US)

DOAJ/Chair of UKSG

See Biography

Joanna Ball is Managing Director for DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals), a community-curated online directory that indexes and provides access to quality, open access, peer-reviewed journals. Before joining DOAJ in 2022, her career was based in academic libraries in the UK and Denmark, most recently as Head of Roskilde University Library, part of the Royal Danish Library. She is currently Chair of UKSG.


10.30

University of Dundee

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Professor Inke Näthke was awarded her PhD from the University of California, San Francisco and then worked as a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University and Harvard Medical School before establishing her independent research team in the School of Life Sciences at the University of Dundee focussed on early changes in bowel cancer. She is Professor of Epithelial Biology and also Associate Dean for Professional Culture. She co-founded the Scottish Research integrity Network, is a member of the Board of Trustees of UKRIO, and is Research Integrity lead in the University.

Digital Science

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Daniel Hook is CEO of Digital Science, co-founder of Symplectic, a research information management provider, and of the Research on Research Institute (RoRI). A theoretical physicist by training, he continues to do research both in physics and in bibliometrics in his spare time, and holds visiting academic positions at Imperial College London and Washington University in St Louis.

Retraction Watch

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Ivan Oransky is one of the two co-founders of Retraction Watch, the editor-in-chief of Spectrum and distinguished journalist in residence at New York University’s Arthur L Carter Journalism Institute.


12.00


13.30


13.30

University of Aberdeen

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Susan Halfpenny is Head of Research and Learning Information Services at the University of Aberdeen. She is responsible for the delivery of digital and information skills, open research and subject services within the Library. Susan has led on a range of initiatives to develop staff and students digital capabilities, including the development of skills frameworks, the rollout of training programmes and the creation of digital citizenship and wellbeing MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses). Her interests are digital scholarship, tackling information inequalities and ethical digital transformation for education and research.

University of York

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Steph Jesper (she or they) is a Teaching & Learning Advisor in the DISC (Digital Inclusion, Skills, & Creativity) team in Library, Archives, and Learning Services at the University of York. She’s a qualified Librarian who moonlights in IT, developing and delivering digital skills training for students and staff, and looking after the University’s online Skills Guides resources. When she’s not teaching all things digital, she’s the sort of person who makes computer games in spreadsheets for fun.

University of York

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Siobhan Dunlop (they/them) is a Teaching and Learning Advisor in the Digital Inclusion, Skills and Creativity (DISC) team at the University of York, supporting people’s digital skills within the university and beyond. They focus on introductory coding, multimedia creation, and digital creativity, as well as the ways in which digital technologies impact our lives in a digital society and the importance of critical digital literacies and ethics in the technological world. When not doing all of this, they also write poems using code.


14.30


15.30


16.00


17.00

University of Sheffield

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Jenni Adams is Open Research Manager at the University of Sheffield, where she leads projects to raise awareness and support uptake of open research practices among researchers at all levels.

University of Sheffield

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Ric Campbell is Research Data Steward at the University of Sheffield. Based in the University Library, he is currently working with departments and research groups across the University to support the adoption of FAIR practices for research data and software.

17.00

Bristol University Press

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Simon Bell is the Institutional Sales Manager for Bristol University Press, responsible for all institutional sales across BUP’s book and journal portfolio including BUP’s new digital platform “Bristol University Press Digital”.


17.30


TBC

Time

Programme

Speakers

08.00


09.00

Let’s Talk About Green – Beth Montague-Hellen, Francis Crick Institute, Katie Fraser, University of Nottingham

Open Access is a foundational topic in Scholarly Communications. However, when information professionals and publishers talk about its future, it is nearly always Gold open access we discuss. Green was seen as the big solution for providing access to those who couldn’t afford it. However, publishers have protested that Green destroys their business models. How true is this, and are we even all talking the same language when we talk about Green?

Has a recent focus on negotiating ‘read and publish’ deals moved towards Gold? Will upcoming milestones in research funder financing and compliance move us back? This session will discuss these questions and ask whether there is a model of Green that we can all get behind.

Are we there yet? A review of transitional agreements in the UK – Chris Banks, Imperial College London, Caren Milloy, Jisc,

Transitional agreements were developed in response to funder policy and institutional demand to constrain costs and facilitate funder compliance. They have since become the dominant model by which UK research outputs are made open access. In January 2023, Jisc instigated a critical review of TAs and the OA landscape to provide an evidence base to inform a conversation on the desired future state of research dissemination. This session will discuss the key findings of the review and its impact on a sector-wide consultation and concrete actions in the UK and beyond.

What did we Read, What did we Publish: Distilling the data that librarians need to manage transformative agreements – Michael Levine-Clark, University of Denver, Jason Price, SCELC Library Consortium

Francis Crick Institute

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Dr Beth Montague-Hellen started off academic life as a Molecular Biologist studying at Manchester University. The next 14 years were spent as a bioinformatician, accruing an MSc and a Phd on the way.

Following this, Beth decided that supporting others to do excellent research was far more rewarding than actually doing the research and so moved into Libraries and Research Support. Beth takes an as open-as-possible, EDI focused approach to research support and is a big advocate for green OA alongside a completely transparent research cycle including radically open data and software sharing.

University of Nottingham

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As Associate Director for Research, Katie is a member of the senior management team at University of Nottingham Libraries UK, and departmental lead on developments and innovations in research communications, research support and research technologies. Katie builds relationships throughout the university community, and leads a team providing practical, straightforward advice and training on planning, publishing, sharing and preserving research. Before becoming a librarian, Katie undertook a PhD in Learning Sciences developing insights into, and enthusiasm for, learning, emerging technologies and the process of research. Katie is a Member of the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP).

University of Denver

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Michael Levine-Clark is Dean of the University of Denver Libraries, where he has worked in various positions since 1999. He serves in leadership roles in multiple consortia and is the chair of the OCLC Americas Regional Council. As a member of many publisher and vendor library advisory boards, he provides guidance about library and higher education trends. For his work on e-books and demand-driven acquisition models, he received the 2015 Harrasowitz Leadership in Library Acquisitions Award. He is widely published and has been invited to speak on six continents about academic library collections and scholarly communication issues.

Imperial College London

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Chris has nearly 39 years’ experience working in Libraries, including over 20 at the British Library in a variety of curatorial, management and strategic roles, and over 16at University Library Director level. She joined Imperial College in September 2013 as Director of Library Services.
Chris’s areas of expertise include strategy, open science and scholarly communications, organisational change, public engagement, space, and her original discipline, music.
Chris is a member of the Jisc UUK Content Negotiations Strategy Group, she chairs the Jisc UUK Content Expert Group, she is an elected Board member of Research Libraries UK (RLUK), and a member of the SCONUL Content Strategy Group.

Jisc

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Caren leads Jisc’s licensing and negotiation service, providing UK education and research with access to digital content and software solutions that support the digital transformation of research, learning, teaching and assessment and the digital estate of universities and colleges.

SCELC Library Consortium


10.30


11.00


11.00

Edge Hill University

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Judith Carr is the Head of Open Research Services at Edge Hill University. She has worked in scholarly communications and open research for 10 years and was formerly Research Data Manager at University of Liverpool. Her interest in the Innovation in Scholarly communications project was sparked by a workshop at the Crick Institute in 2016.

Edge Hill University

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Rachel Bury has worked in Higher Education for more than 20 years, previously working in NHS library and information services in Merseyside. Academic Engagement and Resources covers all support and collaboration with academic colleagues and researchers, including resource provision, and developing staff skills. Previous roles include academic liaison, with extensive experience of working with Faculty of Health staff and NHS researchers.


12.00

Loughborough University

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Gareth Cole is the Open Research Development and Discovery Lead at Loughborough University. He was previously the Loughborough’s Research Data Manager. In his current role he manages the Research Repository team and leads on the University Library’s open research work.
Gareth is also a work package lead on the Open Book Futures project, where he leads the work investigating the archiving and preservation of open access monographs. He held a similar role on the earlier COPIM project.

Figshare

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After a 14 year career in public, FE and HE libraries, Adrian joined Figshare from Loughborough University, as Business Development Manager for the UK, Ireland and Nordics. Adrian is a passionate advocate of open research, and supporting technologies. As a first in family graduate with a wealth of experience supporting faculty Adrian believes in the transformative capabilities that libraries have to improve knowledge, understanding and to benefit society. If you catch him at the conference, please come and say hello; he’s always happy to talk about all things repositories and OR.

Cardiff Metropolitan University

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Mark is an Assistant Head Librarian at Cardiff Met – with the focal points of scholarly communications and research support in his remit. He didn’t really know what it all meant when he first started in the role originally (don’t tell anyone) but now he (very much) does understand (phew!). He is passionate about all aspects of open research, thinks a lot about (and does the work) to support research lifecycles and loves a bit of data wrangling – alongside a healthy interest in shiny new library things. Mark has been working for (nearly!) 20 years in academic libraries.


12.30


14.00

Liverpool John Moores University/Think.Check.Submit.

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Katherine Stephan is the research engagement librarian at Liverpool John Moores University. She is responsible for organising library training related to research, outreach, engagement and publishing for all researchers at LJMU. She has a background in children’s librarianship and is a keen advocate of local libraries, open research and responsible research assessment. She is the librarian member of Think, Check, Submit (an initiative to help researchers identify trusted journals for their research); a member of the UKSG’s outreach and engagement committee; and a co-organiser of Open Research Week, a collaboration between LJMU, Edge Hill, Essex and Liverpool Universities.

University of Edinburgh

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Rebecca Wojturska (she/her) is the Open Access Publishing Officer at the University of Edinburgh, functioning within Library and University Collections on the Scholarly Communications Team. She is responsible for managing Edinburgh Diamond: an open access hosting service which offers hosting, technical support, preservation, indexing, and publishing guidance to staff and students who wish to publish diamond open access books and journals. Rebecca is also the Statistician/Bibliometrician for the Journal of Information Literacy. In her spare time she loves nothing more than reading Gothic literature, watching horror films and crushing her enemies at board games.

Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ)

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Cenyu Shen is Deputy Head of Editorial (Quality) for Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ). Her work focuses on leading and managing the quality team to develop processes and strategies to keep DOAJ away from questionable publishing. Since 2016, she has also been the DOAJ
Ambassador for China to help DOAJ develop the China market. She built the cooperation for DOAJ with Chinese scholarly societies and publishing organisations and established DOAJ’s Chinese journals community to help more local journals be indexed in DOAJ. She was the advisory board member on the Learned Publishing DEIA special issue published by ALPSP in 2022. She holds a PhD in Information Systems Science at the Hanken School of Economics in Finland. Her doctoral thesis explored the gold open access publishing model, its sustainable development and problems of questionable publishing. She is the author or co-author of several scientific publications contained in the Web of Science, one of which has been cited more than 800 times and ranked by The Financial Times in the 4th position among the 100 most socially influential research publications from business schools worldwide over the year 2015-2020.


15.00


15.00

Cornell University

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Peter McCracken has been an electronic resources librarian at Cornell University since 2016. He was a reference librarian at East Carolina University and at the University of Washington, before co-founding Serials Solutions in 2000, where he was responsible for creating the first commercially available e-journal knowledgebase. Peter manages the interactions between Cornell’s e-resources, and also advises on Open Access opportunities. In his spare time, he runs an e-resources database, ShipIndex.org, which helps people do research on vessels.


16.00


16.30


19.00

Time

Programme

Speakers

08.00


09.00

ChatGPT is convenient. This is one of the key reasons for its popularity. It does however present problems for academic integrity, with no reference to the source of information and no accreditation for authors. In this session I’m going to discuss a project combining the convenience of conversational discovery with the reliability of academic sources. Based on the ProQuest One Literature database, the assistant is using large language models to generate answers from academic literature including references to the source of information. I will discuss the goals, the details of the project and technology used, the outcomes and the lessons learned.

CORE-GPT: Combining Open Access research and large language models for credible, trustworthy question answering – David Pride, The Open University

Clarivate

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Since joining Ex Libris (part of Clarivate) in 2001 I worked on strategic data projects, library discovery and user centered services for many years. In my current role I focus on leveraging generative AI for discovering library content. Community work is very important to me. I’m involved in various NISO initiatives incl. KBART as well as serving on the CrossRef board. I’m fascinated by the changes in technology, the scale of material that is available today, and the opportunities they offer. I have degrees in library science, information systems, and history and a passion for lifelong learning.

The Open University

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Dr. David Pride is a Research Associate at The Knowledge Media Institute, part of the STEM faculty at the Open University. He completed his PhD. in 2020 and his research focused on extracting citations from fulltext research papers and classifying these citations according to type and influence on the citing paper. He also conducted the largest study into the use of citation data and peer review in the U.K.’s Research Excellence Framework. He has been an invited speaker at international events and has published extensively in the domain. David was also part of the team that recently completed work on the ON-MERRIT project, a Horizon 2020 project.


10.00


11.00


11.30


12.30

Bestselling Author & Executive Coach – Thor International Inc.

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Shereen Thor is a comedian turned coach who slays with hope and humor. She has shared the stage with greats like Serena Williams, Prince Harry, Pau Gasol, and Les Brown. She is also the bestselling author of Revolutionary Woman, which focuses on inspiring women and people of color to revolutionize how they see themselves to create a more equitable world. She has been featured in Forbes, TEDx, The Wall Street Journal, Insider, Medium, Spike TV, 97.1 AMP Radio, and more. When she isn’t working, she is enjoying the great outdoors, spending time with her family, coaching or playing soccer, enjoying good food with friends and leaving her cell phone in the dust for extended periods of time. To learn more go to www.shereenthor.com.


13.15

Feedback

The conference was great and was organised really well. Everyone was really friendly and I gained loads from it.

2023 delegate

I thoroughly enjoyed the conference and look forward to returning to Glasgow in 2024.

2023 delegate

£ 485.00

+97.00 VAT

£650.00

+130.00 VAT

General queries – events@uksg.org 

Sponsorship queries – Par Rock at Content Online for more information – par@contentonline.com

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