A study of Thomson-Scientific ISI ranked Library and Information Science (LIS) journals (n = 52) is reported. The study examined the stances of publishers as expressed in the Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTAs) of the journals toward self-archiving, the practice of depositing digital copies of one\u27s works in an Open Archives Initiative (OAI)-compliant open access repository. Sixty-two percent (32) do not make their CTAs available on the open Web; 38% (20) do. Of the 38% that do make CTAs available, two are open access journals. Of the 62% that do not have a publicly available CTA, 40% are silent about self-archiving. Even among the 20 journal CTAs publicly available there is a high level of ambiguity. Closer examination augmen...
Authors in different disciplines exhibit very different behaviours on the so-called ‘green’ road to ...
Most scholarly journals have explicit copyright restrictions for authors outlining how published art...
Concerns about intellectual property rights are a significant barrier to the practice of scholarly s...
A study of Thomson-Scientific ISI ranked Library and Information Science (LIS) journals (n = 52) is...
This paper has been published in the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Tec...
This paper reports on the results of an analysis of 80 copyright transfer agreements (CTAs) with par...
This paper reports on the results of an analysis of 80 copyright transfer agreements (CTAs) with par...
Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTA) are a rich source of rights information related to self-archivin...
This study examines 78 law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journals ask ...
Overview - Analysis of 80 scholarly publishers' copyright agreements - Selected examples from major ...
This study examined copyright provisions of law journal publication agreements and found that a mino...
This article is the fourth in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Right...
This study examines forty-nine law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journ...
This article is the fourth in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Right...
Examines self-archiving and licensing clauses of OA journals indexed in DOAJ and SHERPA/RoMEO databa...
Authors in different disciplines exhibit very different behaviours on the so-called ‘green’ road to ...
Most scholarly journals have explicit copyright restrictions for authors outlining how published art...
Concerns about intellectual property rights are a significant barrier to the practice of scholarly s...
A study of Thomson-Scientific ISI ranked Library and Information Science (LIS) journals (n = 52) is...
This paper has been published in the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Tec...
This paper reports on the results of an analysis of 80 copyright transfer agreements (CTAs) with par...
This paper reports on the results of an analysis of 80 copyright transfer agreements (CTAs) with par...
Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTA) are a rich source of rights information related to self-archivin...
This study examines 78 law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journals ask ...
Overview - Analysis of 80 scholarly publishers' copyright agreements - Selected examples from major ...
This study examined copyright provisions of law journal publication agreements and found that a mino...
This article is the fourth in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Right...
This study examines forty-nine law journal publication agreements and finds that a minority of journ...
This article is the fourth in a series of six emanating from the UK JISC-funded RoMEO Project (Right...
Examines self-archiving and licensing clauses of OA journals indexed in DOAJ and SHERPA/RoMEO databa...
Authors in different disciplines exhibit very different behaviours on the so-called ‘green’ road to ...
Most scholarly journals have explicit copyright restrictions for authors outlining how published art...
Concerns about intellectual property rights are a significant barrier to the practice of scholarly s...