Discusses the place of the scholarly journal and the ejournal in scientific research, with reference to open access and possible future subscription models. Associated common interests of publishers and librarians are described
The so-called "serial pricing crisis" has been with us for a long time. The responsibilities are now...
Although scholarly journals have enjoyed three and one-half centuries of valued use, there is a grea...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
Spiraling costs and stagnant library budgets have made the acquisition of scholarly publications uns...
Within the scholarly ecosystem academia, libraries and publishers have evolved together over the las...
Libraries in the 21st century are beginning to assume roles and responsibilities further up the rese...
The conversion of scholarly journals to digital format is proceeding rapidly, especially for those f...
This article discusses the increase in journal prices and the resulting pressures on library budgets...
For more than a decade libraries and scientists have been complaining about the ever-spiraling cost ...
For hundreds of years the scientific journals has been the foremost tool for scholarly communication...
Libraries and publishers have evolved together. Publishers rely on libraries as a minimum market for...
Scientific knowledge is circulated through readers and authors. Libraries served the first, publishe...
Libraries have provided services to researchers for many years. Changes in technology and new publis...
Despite holding the potential to liberate scholarly information, the digital era has, to the contrar...
Presented at Networking and the future of Libraries 2: managing the intellectual record, 19-21 April...
The so-called "serial pricing crisis" has been with us for a long time. The responsibilities are now...
Although scholarly journals have enjoyed three and one-half centuries of valued use, there is a grea...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...
Spiraling costs and stagnant library budgets have made the acquisition of scholarly publications uns...
Within the scholarly ecosystem academia, libraries and publishers have evolved together over the las...
Libraries in the 21st century are beginning to assume roles and responsibilities further up the rese...
The conversion of scholarly journals to digital format is proceeding rapidly, especially for those f...
This article discusses the increase in journal prices and the resulting pressures on library budgets...
For more than a decade libraries and scientists have been complaining about the ever-spiraling cost ...
For hundreds of years the scientific journals has been the foremost tool for scholarly communication...
Libraries and publishers have evolved together. Publishers rely on libraries as a minimum market for...
Scientific knowledge is circulated through readers and authors. Libraries served the first, publishe...
Libraries have provided services to researchers for many years. Changes in technology and new publis...
Despite holding the potential to liberate scholarly information, the digital era has, to the contrar...
Presented at Networking and the future of Libraries 2: managing the intellectual record, 19-21 April...
The so-called "serial pricing crisis" has been with us for a long time. The responsibilities are now...
Although scholarly journals have enjoyed three and one-half centuries of valued use, there is a grea...
The scholarly communication and research evaluation landscape is locked into historical paradigms wh...