A longitudinal study of serial cancellations was conducted by analyzing the cancellation lists between 1987 and 1990 from five midwestern libraries of the Association of Research Libraries. The study was designed to test the primary hypothesis that large academic libraries, faced with the same negative impacts on their budgets, are cancelling the same or similar types of serials. This hypothesis was disproved. Results of the study showed that, of 6,503 cancelled titles, only 281 (4 percent) were cancelled at more than one library, resulting in 6,222 (96 percent) unique title cancellations within this survey. Results also provide an overall profile of the at-risk journal. An additional survey of collection development officers gives insight ...
In 2004, a group of Illinois librarians was awarded a research grant to assess the state of Illinois...
Interlibrary loan has traditionally been offered as a substitute method of access for low-use titles...
Because of the recent economic crisis, a number of academic libraries have faced the possibili...
In 1993, Tina E. Chrzastowski and Karen A. Schmidt published a longitudinal study of serial cancella...
Domestic serials cancellation and serials holdings records for 3 years (1992–1994) from 10 U.S. acad...
This paper reports on the outcomes of research assessing the nature and extent of print journal canc...
In the latter half of the 1980's there was a drastic decline in the number of monograph acquisi...
Research in Librarianship Grant awarded by the Canadian Association of Research LibrariesPeer Review...
Periodicals and serials have been inflating at double-digit rates for years. As no library can shou...
Beginning in 2016, both Western Washington University (WWU) and George Washington University (GWU) f...
Canceling an individual serial subscription when the journal is available in a third-party aggregate...
This article is based on part of a survey that investigated journal cancellations in university libr...
If ever there was a perplexing area in librarianship, it is the handling of serial publications. It ...
Describes an easy method to identify serials for cancellation based on usage data and inflation rate...
A precipitous rise in the price of library materials, especially serials; an increase in worldwide p...
In 2004, a group of Illinois librarians was awarded a research grant to assess the state of Illinois...
Interlibrary loan has traditionally been offered as a substitute method of access for low-use titles...
Because of the recent economic crisis, a number of academic libraries have faced the possibili...
In 1993, Tina E. Chrzastowski and Karen A. Schmidt published a longitudinal study of serial cancella...
Domestic serials cancellation and serials holdings records for 3 years (1992–1994) from 10 U.S. acad...
This paper reports on the outcomes of research assessing the nature and extent of print journal canc...
In the latter half of the 1980's there was a drastic decline in the number of monograph acquisi...
Research in Librarianship Grant awarded by the Canadian Association of Research LibrariesPeer Review...
Periodicals and serials have been inflating at double-digit rates for years. As no library can shou...
Beginning in 2016, both Western Washington University (WWU) and George Washington University (GWU) f...
Canceling an individual serial subscription when the journal is available in a third-party aggregate...
This article is based on part of a survey that investigated journal cancellations in university libr...
If ever there was a perplexing area in librarianship, it is the handling of serial publications. It ...
Describes an easy method to identify serials for cancellation based on usage data and inflation rate...
A precipitous rise in the price of library materials, especially serials; an increase in worldwide p...
In 2004, a group of Illinois librarians was awarded a research grant to assess the state of Illinois...
Interlibrary loan has traditionally been offered as a substitute method of access for low-use titles...
Because of the recent economic crisis, a number of academic libraries have faced the possibili...