Awesome-Agent-Skills-for-Empirical-Research interlibrary-loan-guide
Access papers through interlibrary loan and document delivery services
install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Agent-Skills-for-Empirical-Research
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Agent-Skills-for-Empirical-Research "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/43-wentorai-research-plugins/skills/literature/fulltext/interlibrary-loan-guide" ~/.claude/skills/brycewang-stanford-awesome-agent-skills-for-empirical-research-interlibrary-loan && rm -rf "$T"
manifest:
skills/43-wentorai-research-plugins/skills/literature/fulltext/interlibrary-loan-guide/SKILL.mdsource content
Interlibrary Loan Guide
A skill for accessing research papers and books through interlibrary loan (ILL) and document delivery services when your institution does not have a subscription. Covers ILL workflows, alternative free access methods, and strategies for rapid document retrieval.
Understanding Interlibrary Loan
What Is ILL?
Interlibrary loan is a service where your library borrows materials from another library on your behalf. Most academic libraries offer ILL free of charge to their students, faculty, and staff. Turnaround time is typically 1-7 business days for articles and 1-3 weeks for books.
Types of Requests
Article/Chapter Request: - You receive a digital scan (PDF) of the article - Usually delivered to your email or ILL portal - Turnaround: 1-5 business days - Typically free Book Loan: - Physical book is shipped from another library - Must be returned by a due date (usually 3-6 weeks) - Turnaround: 5-15 business days - May have a small shipping fee Thesis/Dissertation: - Some are available digitally via ProQuest or institutional repositories - Others must be requested as physical loans or scans - Turnaround varies widely
Step-by-Step ILL Process
Submitting a Request
def prepare_ill_request(item_type: str, metadata: dict) -> dict: """ Prepare an interlibrary loan request with required information. Args: item_type: 'article', 'book', or 'chapter' metadata: Bibliographic information about the item """ required_fields = { "article": [ "article_title", "journal_title", "author", "year", "volume", "issue", "pages", "doi" ], "book": [ "title", "author", "publisher", "year", "isbn", "edition" ], "chapter": [ "chapter_title", "book_title", "author", "editor", "publisher", "year", "pages", "isbn" ] } request = {"type": item_type} fields = required_fields.get(item_type, []) for field in fields: value = metadata.get(field, "") request[field] = value if not value: request.setdefault("missing_fields", []).append(field) if request.get("missing_fields"): request["note"] = ( "Provide as many fields as possible. " "DOI or PMID alone is often sufficient for articles." ) return request
Typical Workflow
1. Verify your library does not have access - Check library catalog and database A-Z list - Try off-campus access via VPN or proxy 2. Gather bibliographic details - Title, author, journal/book, year, DOI or ISBN - The more detail you provide, the faster the request is filled 3. Submit request through your library's ILL system - Common systems: ILLiad, Tipasa, OCLC WorldShare - Usually accessible from your library's website under "Interlibrary Loan" 4. Wait for delivery - Articles: PDF delivered to your email or ILL portal - Books: Pick up at the library circulation desk 5. Return books by the due date
Free Alternatives Before Requesting ILL
Check These Sources First
1. Open Access repositories: - PubMed Central (PMC) for NIH-funded biomedical research - arXiv, bioRxiv, medRxiv for preprints - SSRN for social science and economics working papers - Institutional repositories (search via BASE or OpenDOAR) 2. Author contact: - Email the corresponding author requesting a copy - Check the author's personal or lab website for PDFs - ResearchGate: request full text from the author 3. Legal free access tools: - Unpaywall browser extension (finds legal OA copies) - CORE.ac.uk (aggregates open access research) - Google Scholar: click "PDF" links on the right side 4. Your institution: - Try different databases (your library may have access via a different provider) - Ask a librarian: they know about access paths you may miss
Document Delivery Services
Commercial Alternatives
When ILL is too slow or unavailable, commercial document delivery services can provide articles within hours:
| Service | Turnaround | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| British Library Document Supply | 1-2 days | Varies by country |
| Reprints Desk | Same day to 48 hours | Per-article fee |
| Copyright Clearance Center (Get It Now) | Minutes to hours | Per-article fee |
| DeepDyve | Instant (rental model) | Monthly subscription |
When to Use Document Delivery vs. ILL
- Use ILL for non-urgent requests (1+ week lead time is acceptable)
- Use document delivery when you need the article within 24 hours
- Use document delivery when your institution has no ILL service (e.g., independent researchers)
Tips for Efficient Access
- Keep a reference manager (Zotero, Mendeley) to avoid requesting the same paper twice
- Batch ILL requests: submit several at once during literature review phases
- Build relationships with your subject librarian -- they can often expedite requests or suggest alternative access routes
- For systematic reviews, inform your library early about the volume of ILL requests you will need