I. GENERAL ISSUESScholarly Communications: Creation and Change, by Linda J. Gould, University of Washington Libraries. From Library Directions, vol. 10, no. 3, Spring 2000. Scholarly Communications Receives New Emphasis, interview Linda J. Gould, University of Washington Libraries. From Library Directions, vol. 9, no. 2, Winter 1999. "To Publish and Perish," an article in Policy Perspectives, and co-sponsored by the Association of Research Libraries, the Association of American Universities, and the Pew Higher Education Roundtable. [Linda Gould’s paper to SER (not yet ready to post] |
II. COPYRIGHTPermission to Use Submitted Work, from Haptics-e: The Electronic Journal of Haptics Research. Improving Your Book Contract: Negotiation Tips for Eight Typical Clauses, presented by The Authors Guild, from New York. License to Publish is a PDF-format sample publishing agreement from the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers, an organization based in England. Their Copyright page includes a link to the publishing agreement and other relevant documents. TRLN Model University Policy Regarding Faculty Publication in Scientific and Technical Scholarly Journals, produced by the NC State University Scholarly Communication Center. ARL—Copyright and IP (on Projects & Programs R.P.) not ready yet. Copyright Management Center - Indiana University - Purdue University of Indianapolis. Copyright Crash Course - University of Texas. |
III. ADDITIONAL SOURCES OF INFORMATIONScholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography, maintained by Charles W. Bailey, Jr. Comments from the SPARC/ACRL Publisher-Librarian Forum. Libraries of the Future Bibliography, compiled by Carol R. Gurstelle, October 1999, from Metronet. |
IV. MISCELLANEOUS"Update on Scholarly Publisher Profits," by Kaylyn Hipps, updates an October 1998 article that described the current state of profits by publishers of scholarly journals. Both reports contain useful tables that show financial data regarding publisher profits. "The Impact of Publisher Mergers on Journal Prices: An Update," a December 1999 followup to an earlier report on journal pricing changes, from the Association of Research Libraries. ARL Newsletter 200: Special Issue on Journals. October 1998. |
Scholarly
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Last updated: 7 July 2000