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Depositing to the DukeSpace Repository

A guide to sharing scholarly works and student theses and dissertations openly at Duke University.

DukeSpace Policies for Undergraduate Theses

 

Title Page 

Duke requires undergraduate honors theses contain a title page with the following information in this exact order:

  • Title
  • Author
  • Advisor
  • Type of paper (e.g., A thesis submitted to the Department of Economics for honors)
  • Duke University
  • Durham, North Carolina
  • Current year

 

Access, Storage, and Preservation

Duke University Libraries (DUL) and Duke University are committed to the long-term preservation and persistent access to the research and scholarship curated in DukeSpace. Once deposited, your work will be available worldwide with a persistent handle link. To learn more about digital preservation, you may visit the Libraries’ Digital Preservation Policy.

 

Licensing and Copyright

When you deposit your paper in DukeSpace, you will be required to sign a non-exclusive distribution license, which is an agreement that provides Duke University the right to reproduce, translate, and distribute your work. You retain the copyright to your work, and thus retain the rights to further reproduce and distribute it as you wish. 

Your work will be made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivatives license (CC BY-NC-ND). Under this license, users of your work are free to share it, provided they abide by certain terms (e.g. appropriate credit must be given to use the work). The full CC BY-NC-ND text can be found here.

 

Embargoes

Undergraduate theses cannot be embargoed in DukeSpace.

 

Withdrawing an item

When an item is deposited, it is intended to remain visible and usable long-term by broad audiences. The permanent link, which is often cited and used by other researchers, becomes part of the scholarly record. Duke Libraries staff make every effort to keep these links active, so that if someone in the future tries to follow that link they will be able to see the item that was being referred to, which their research may rely on.

When an item is made public it can only be withdrawn (or hidden) for specific reasons, and a record will be left indicating when and why the item was withdrawn; no items will simply be made to disappear. This should be taken into consideration if deposit is not required by your program. For the Libraries' full policy, visit the Deaccession and DMCA Takedown Policy. Requests to remove an item can be made using the Deaccession Request Form.