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Learned Publishing, Volume 17
Volume 17, Number 1, 2004
- Jayne Marks, Timo Hannay:
Evolving scholarly communication. 3-6 - Neil Beagrie:
Digital Centre. 7-9 - Hans E. Roosendaal:
Driving change in the research and HE information market. 11-16 - David C. Prosser:
Between a rock and a hard place: the big squeeze for small publishers. 17-22 - Toby Green:
Publishing e-books: OECD's pay-per-view and e-library services 1998-2003. 25-30 - Cliff Morgan:
Metadata for STM journal publishers: a review of the current scene. 31-37 - Suzanne Wilson Higgins:
Print on-demand is boosting availability of books and journal issues - and that's good for sales! 39-42 - Pinar Erzin:
The 2003 Extenza telemarketing effectiveness survey. 43-45 - Laura Bonald, Sally Morris:
The ALPSP Learned Journals Collection. 47-51 - Valerie Bence, Charles Oppenheim:
The role of academic journal publications in the UK Research Assessment Exercise. 53-68
Volume 17, Number 2, 2004
- Iain Stevenson:
Is open access the new vanity publishing? 83-84 - Blaise Cronin, Kathryn La Barre:
Mickey Mouse and Milton: book publishing in the humanities. 85-98 - Shengli Ren, Ronald Rousseau:
The role of China's English-language scientific journals in scientific communication. 99-104 - Ulrich Pöschl:
Interactive journal concept for improved scientific publishing and quality assurance. 105-113 - Mark Ware:
Institutional repositories and scholarly publishing. 115-124 - Helen Cooke:
A historical review of the chemistry periodical literature until 1950. 125-134 - Peter Banks:
Open access: a medical association perspective. 135-142 - Christine Lamb:
Open access publishing models: opportunity or threat to scholarly and academic publishers? 143-150 - Chris Awre:
The JISC's FAIR Programme: disclosing and sharing institutional assets. 151-156 - J. Eric Davies, Helen Greenwood:
Scholarly communication trends - voices from the vortex: a summary of specialist opinion. 157-167 - Peter Gregory:
Personal View. 169-170
Volume 17, Number 3, 2004
- John Cox:
What can we learn from the RoweCom débâcle? 179-181 - Anne Vindenes Allen, Graham Vaughan Lees:
TheScientificWorldJOURNAL: sustainability through innovation. 183-187 - Nigel Lees:
Learned and professional society libraries and copyright. 189-194 - Alan Singleton:
Data protection and peer review. 195-198 - Turid Hedlund, Tomas Gustafsson, Bo-Christer Björk:
The open access scientific journal: an empirical study. 199-209 - Ronald Akie, Joel Baron:
The demand side of STM publishing: understanding value creation in new market units. 211-217 - Alma Swan, Sheridan Brown:
Authors and open access publishing. 219-224 - Amy Brand:
CrossRef and the research experience. 225-230 - John W. Houghton, Colin Steele, Margaret Henty:
Research practices and scholarly communication in the digital environment. 231-249
Volume 17, Number 4, October 2004
- Tim Rix:
Crisis? What crisis? The university presses. 259-260 - Ian Rowlands, David Nicholas, Paul Huntington:
Scholarly communication in the digital environment: what do authors want? 261-273 - Chris Bellekom:
Building preservation functionality in a digital archive: the National Library of The Netherlands. 275-280 - Paul Jackson:
IEE professional magazines and networks. 281-289 - Kate Worlock:
Scoping the STM publishing market. 291-298 - Charlie Rapple:
After the goldrush - the golden age of reference linking. 299-304 - Stephen Pinfield:
What do universities want from publishing? 305-311 - Kent R. Anderson:
Comparing print and online readership: matching perception to reality across media. 313-315 - Volker Hühn, Michael Huter:
The Red Jacket UTB: a model for co-operative textbook publishing. 316-318 - Michael Sosteric:
The International Consortium for the Advancement of Academic Publication - an idea whose time has come (finally!). 319-325 - Shuhua Wang, Hengjun Wang:
Challenges and strategies for Chinese university journals. 326-330
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