For more than 15 years, books available only in paper form have fought a losing battle with digitally-available articles in academic journals – the publishing equivalent of horse cavalry repeatedly charging barbed wire defences with machine guns. As their usefulness and effectiveness waned, so the intellectual status of books in the social sciences declined strongly. In the first of a two-part blog post, Patrick Dunleavy traces the declining role of books that reached a nadir in 2010. Part 2 of the argument explores the second coming of books in digital forms
THEPAPER STARTS OUT by reviewing the so-called “library crisis ” and the extensive literature on the...
When it comes to book-length texts, readers around the world continue to display a preference for pr...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
For more than 15 years, books available only in paper form have fought a losing battle with digitall...
Books at last are going digital – bringing to an end the futile period of paper books losing out to ...
In the sciences, digital modes of publication are already regarded as equivalent (if not superior) t...
Digitization was not, nor ever will be, the solution to problems faced by Academic Libraries. Digiti...
It is already a cliché to announce the demise of the book in the wake of the digital revolution. Whi...
Doueihi's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities
Link to the abstract : http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8281...
Technology is reconfiguring the ways in which we consume, produce and disseminate literature, both w...
The e-book is raising fundamental questions around the dynamics and habits of reading; the role of b...
Stephen Casper and his father both published their respective academic text and novella in the same ...
The chapter examines digital publishing (E-books)within the context of recent developments in schola...
The digital information environment has ensured that the twenty first century will be a global water...
THEPAPER STARTS OUT by reviewing the so-called “library crisis ” and the extensive literature on the...
When it comes to book-length texts, readers around the world continue to display a preference for pr...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
For more than 15 years, books available only in paper form have fought a losing battle with digitall...
Books at last are going digital – bringing to an end the futile period of paper books losing out to ...
In the sciences, digital modes of publication are already regarded as equivalent (if not superior) t...
Digitization was not, nor ever will be, the solution to problems faced by Academic Libraries. Digiti...
It is already a cliché to announce the demise of the book in the wake of the digital revolution. Whi...
Doueihi's paper given November 8, 2008, at the Forum on Academic Publishing in the Humanities
Link to the abstract : http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=8281...
Technology is reconfiguring the ways in which we consume, produce and disseminate literature, both w...
The e-book is raising fundamental questions around the dynamics and habits of reading; the role of b...
Stephen Casper and his father both published their respective academic text and novella in the same ...
The chapter examines digital publishing (E-books)within the context of recent developments in schola...
The digital information environment has ensured that the twenty first century will be a global water...
THEPAPER STARTS OUT by reviewing the so-called “library crisis ” and the extensive literature on the...
When it comes to book-length texts, readers around the world continue to display a preference for pr...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...