This paper describes the results of a study to compare contemporary e-journal licenses from two research universities in the United States and Spain in terms of e-reserves, interlibrary loan, text and data mining, authors´ rights and treatment of copyright exceptions, usage statistics, governing law, data privacy, and obligations entailing security. The data include a higher proportion of scholarly society and academic press publishers than earlier license analyses. This analysis compares license terms over time, across publisher types and between the two libraries, and it compares findings with recommendations from model licenses. The results show progress toward model license goals in some areas, but deficiencies in others including self-...
Following the emergence of electronic resources (e-resources), librarians developed licensing guidel...
Metrics regarding Open Access (OA) availability for readers and the enablers of redistribution of co...
This study examines forty-nine law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journ...
This paper explored the degree to which use terms proposed by model licenses have become institution...
This paper explored the degree to use terms proposed by model licenses have become institutionalized...
Licensing has been a predominate means of governing the transfer of electronic journal content betwe...
This questionnaire-based study examines how libraries are now handling electronic journal (e-journal...
This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in ac...
While electronic publications can greatly increase a university community?s access to information, t...
This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in ac...
As e-books settle into the academic market, the relationship between publishers, vendors, and librar...
When academic journals were distributed only as paper editions, the obvious way for scholars to shar...
This report summarizes a review of 12 e-journal archiving programs from the perspective of concerns ...
Information Technology (IT) revolution has brought global change and has impact on electronic publis...
P. 181-195This article studies themodels of consumption of the academic communities of five Spanish ...
Following the emergence of electronic resources (e-resources), librarians developed licensing guidel...
Metrics regarding Open Access (OA) availability for readers and the enablers of redistribution of co...
This study examines forty-nine law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journ...
This paper explored the degree to which use terms proposed by model licenses have become institution...
This paper explored the degree to use terms proposed by model licenses have become institutionalized...
Licensing has been a predominate means of governing the transfer of electronic journal content betwe...
This questionnaire-based study examines how libraries are now handling electronic journal (e-journal...
This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in ac...
While electronic publications can greatly increase a university community?s access to information, t...
This is a study of the treatment of library patron privacy in licenses for electronic journals in ac...
As e-books settle into the academic market, the relationship between publishers, vendors, and librar...
When academic journals were distributed only as paper editions, the obvious way for scholars to shar...
This report summarizes a review of 12 e-journal archiving programs from the perspective of concerns ...
Information Technology (IT) revolution has brought global change and has impact on electronic publis...
P. 181-195This article studies themodels of consumption of the academic communities of five Spanish ...
Following the emergence of electronic resources (e-resources), librarians developed licensing guidel...
Metrics regarding Open Access (OA) availability for readers and the enablers of redistribution of co...
This study examines forty-nine law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journ...