Academic libraries are increasingly investing in new efforts to support their research and teaching faculty in the activities they care about most. Learn why becoming a publisher can help meet the most fundamental needs of your research community and at the same time can help transform today’s inflationary cost model for serials. Using the 35 peer-reviewed journals published by the University Library System, University of Pittsburgh as a case study, we will explore not only why to become a publisher but exactly how to achieve it, step by step, including careful selection of publishing partners, choosing the right platform for manuscript submission and editorial workflow management, one-time processes to launch a new journal, conducting p...
University libraries have witnessed sweeping changes in scholarly publishing over the past decade. D...
Over the past five years, libraries have begun to expand their role in the scholarly publishing val...
Why Library Publishing? In a post on library publishing for the influential Scholarly Kitchen blog, ...
Academic libraries are increasingly investing in new efforts to support their research and teaching ...
The University Library System (ULS), University of Pittsburgh began its e-journal publishing program...
University Libraries are increasingly engaging in publishing many types of works, including journals...
Academic libraries are demonstrating an increased commitment to transforming the scholarly publishin...
Library publishing is a hot topic. We compiled the results of interviews with librarians and editors...
A growing role for all types of libraries is to enable content creation by members of their communit...
This article describes a half-day preconference that focused on the library as publisher. It examine...
The Power to Publish: How Academic Librarians Support and Promote Scholarly Publishing Jennifer Town...
The traditional role of libraries as aggregators, curators and disseminators of resources has been p...
Over the last twenty years, library publishing has emerged in higher education as a new class of pub...
Scholarly publishing is moving beyond the physical monograph and journal. In today\u27s changing aca...
Spiraling costs and stagnant library budgets have made the acquisition of scholarly publications uns...
University libraries have witnessed sweeping changes in scholarly publishing over the past decade. D...
Over the past five years, libraries have begun to expand their role in the scholarly publishing val...
Why Library Publishing? In a post on library publishing for the influential Scholarly Kitchen blog, ...
Academic libraries are increasingly investing in new efforts to support their research and teaching ...
The University Library System (ULS), University of Pittsburgh began its e-journal publishing program...
University Libraries are increasingly engaging in publishing many types of works, including journals...
Academic libraries are demonstrating an increased commitment to transforming the scholarly publishin...
Library publishing is a hot topic. We compiled the results of interviews with librarians and editors...
A growing role for all types of libraries is to enable content creation by members of their communit...
This article describes a half-day preconference that focused on the library as publisher. It examine...
The Power to Publish: How Academic Librarians Support and Promote Scholarly Publishing Jennifer Town...
The traditional role of libraries as aggregators, curators and disseminators of resources has been p...
Over the last twenty years, library publishing has emerged in higher education as a new class of pub...
Scholarly publishing is moving beyond the physical monograph and journal. In today\u27s changing aca...
Spiraling costs and stagnant library budgets have made the acquisition of scholarly publications uns...
University libraries have witnessed sweeping changes in scholarly publishing over the past decade. D...
Over the past five years, libraries have begun to expand their role in the scholarly publishing val...
Why Library Publishing? In a post on library publishing for the influential Scholarly Kitchen blog, ...