1) it is optional, not required (the ProQuest deposit is required); and
2) it will be available to everyone on the Internet; there is no embargo for dissertations in the UNL DigitalCommons.
Master's candidates: Deposit of your thesis or project is required. (If an embargo, [restricted access] is necessary, you may deposit the thesis at http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/embargotheses/ — but only after getting the prior approval of your department and the Graduate Office; contact Terri Eastin).
All depositors: We try to observe a 24-hour "cooling off" period to give you opportunity to correct those "oops" issues that seem to emerge just after deposit.
Upon deposit, you will immediately receive an email that your submission has been received (and this is what you need to show the Graduate Office).
However, you can still log back in and select Revise and upload a new version with your advisor's name spelled right, or your mother thanked in the Acknowledgments, or whatever you're stressing about.
After about a day, your submission will be "published" or "posted", making it available to the Internet; you will get another email to that effect, and your submission can no longer be changed--by you.
If further changes are needed, these can be made by sending a revised file to the administrator < proyster@unl.edu > requesting replacement of the current online version. DO NOT RESUBMIT YOUR THESIS / DISSERTATION. That creates duplicate records, confusion, wasted effort, frustration, sadness, tears, and causes kittens to get sick.
Finally: Congratulations; you are almost there. Click the "Submit your paper or article" link at the bottom of the gray box at left. Follow the instructions. You should be able to copy (Ctrl-C) and paste (Ctrl-V) most fields.
You are the sole author; your advisor is not considered a co-author.
Your institution is "University of Nebraska-Lincoln" (not "at Lincoln" or ", Lincoln"). Do not leave it blank; then the administrator has to fill it in, and he is tempted to make it something silly.
You do not need to repeat your name and title in the Abstract field; just the body of the abstract.
When you reach the question "Was this submission previously published in a journal?", just skip that part.
Be sure to click the "Submit" button at the bottom. Files upload at the rate of about 5 Mb per minute, so if you have an ungodly large file, it may take a bit of time. If your file exceeds 40 Mb, think about reducing its size--there are many ways; Google "reduce pdf file size" to find some.
Okay, get started. That thesis is not going to submit itself.
2020
Vagueness and the Logic of the World, Zack Garrett
Desire Satisfaction Theories and the Problem of Depression, Andrew Spaid
2018
Designing Epistemic Concepts, Luke E. Elwonger
2016
Theories of Properties and Ontological Theory-Choice: An Essay in Metaontology, Christopher Gibilisco
2015
A Deflationary Interpretation of Locke's Theory of Ideas, Danielle N. Hampton
Re(Public)an Reasons: A Republican Theory of Legitimacy and Justification, Christopher McCammon
Blame within Reason, Adam R. Thompson
2013
Causal Explanation of Human Behavior in the Social Sciences, Maria R. Zavada
2011
Strategies for Defusing the Demandingness Objection, Justin J. Moss
Epistemic Contextualism: A Defense and Analysis, Sruthi R. Rothenfluch
Doing Without Desiring, Steven E. Swartzer
2010
BACKGROUND ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE: AN EXTENSION OF RAWLS'S POLITICAL LIBERALISM, Edward Abplanalp
The Ontology of Pure Dispositions, William A. Bauer
2008
A DEFENSE OF MODERATE INVARIANTISM, Leo W. Iacono