The consumption of academic journals has radically changed over the past decade, explains the author. While there has been an exponential rise in published scholarship, spiralling costs for commercial journals have caused cutbacks in subscriptions to academic journals by institutional libraries and raised calls for free online access to unpublished work that scholars have produced. The rise of the Internet has facilitated a concomitant growth in online scholarship. What, asks the author, are the promises on online scholarship
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to discuss what the beginning of the Internet Age means for th...
It is not a hyperbole to say that the foundations of academic publishing are in a state of large‐sca...
The recent surge in scientific electronic journals began when libraries began having access to the W...
This article provides an editor’s perspective on academic journals in the transition from print to o...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
Print academic journals are dead. As we watch large metropolitan newspapers fail (as are many small ...
The way in which researchers publish their work is undergoing a profound transformation. The introdu...
The growth of Internet and digital technologies has changed the world of journal publishing and rese...
More has changed in journal publishing in the past twenty years than the previous four centuries. Di...
Pressure to publish in traditional outlets, reinforced by the REF, conflicts with the needs of unive...
This paper considers how and why scholarly publishing has changed over the last two decades. It disc...
Electronic journals have been applauded as a solution to the serials pricing crisis, a step toward e...
Print publishing is increasingly expensive, but new alternatives are on the rise. Digital open acce...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
For the last 60 years, scholarly journals have witnessed unprecedented growth, controversy and chang...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to discuss what the beginning of the Internet Age means for th...
It is not a hyperbole to say that the foundations of academic publishing are in a state of large‐sca...
The recent surge in scientific electronic journals began when libraries began having access to the W...
This article provides an editor’s perspective on academic journals in the transition from print to o...
The basic model for scholarly communication in science and technology has remained unchanged for ove...
Print academic journals are dead. As we watch large metropolitan newspapers fail (as are many small ...
The way in which researchers publish their work is undergoing a profound transformation. The introdu...
The growth of Internet and digital technologies has changed the world of journal publishing and rese...
More has changed in journal publishing in the past twenty years than the previous four centuries. Di...
Pressure to publish in traditional outlets, reinforced by the REF, conflicts with the needs of unive...
This paper considers how and why scholarly publishing has changed over the last two decades. It disc...
Electronic journals have been applauded as a solution to the serials pricing crisis, a step toward e...
Print publishing is increasingly expensive, but new alternatives are on the rise. Digital open acce...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
For the last 60 years, scholarly journals have witnessed unprecedented growth, controversy and chang...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to discuss what the beginning of the Internet Age means for th...
It is not a hyperbole to say that the foundations of academic publishing are in a state of large‐sca...
The recent surge in scientific electronic journals began when libraries began having access to the W...