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Main Authors: Whisler, Sandra, Rosenblatt, Susan F.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED414921
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author Whisler, Sandra
Rosenblatt, Susan F.
author_facet Whisler, Sandra
Rosenblatt, Susan F.
Whisler, Sandra
Rosenblatt, Susan F.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Library and the University Press: Two Views of the Costs and Problems of the Current System of Scholarly Publishing. Whisler, Sandra Rosenblatt, Susan F. Academic Libraries Cost Effectiveness Costs Electronic Journals Electronic Publishing Faculty Publishing Higher Education Information Dissemination Information Technology Library Collection Development Nonprint Media Publications Publishing Industry Research Libraries Scholarly Communication Scholarly Journals University Presses The costs of scholarly publishing have become unsustainable for both research libraries and university presses. This paper discusses how the transition to electronic journal publishing changes the ways in which these two participants in the scholarly communication process begin to analyze and attempt to control their cost structures in order to remain economically viable. Libraries and their users will be reluctant to abandon a known archival format, and capital investments in the technical infrastructure needed to deliver scholarly information electronically may be made slowly. For publishers, the need to cover first copy costs and to continue serving a market demand for print will create a significant transitional period during which both print and electronic formats must be produced and funded. The transition to fully electronic publication, although likely to reduce operational costs for libraries slightly in the short run and significantly in the long run, creates potential revenue interruptions for presses. Many publishers have proposed pricing models for electronic journals that are based on existing print subscription prices and that include multi-year guarantees of price adjustments to cover both inflation and expansion in the content offered. Libraries are caught in the dilemma posed by many publishers' current pricing structures for electronic journals: the offer of a multi-year reduction in the rate of inflation in high-value commercial journals is attractive when compared to the anticipated inflation in print journals; yet accepting that model would protect a rising share of library collection budgets for high-inflation journals which would then rapidly crowd out other scholarly publications. The short-term measures that the library and press individually might rationally employ to maintain fiscal stability may have far reaching negative implications for the economic viability of the system of scholarly communication as a whole, particularly for the university presses. (Contains 22 references.) (AEF/Author)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED414921
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1997
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Library and the University Press: Two Views of the Costs and Problems of the Current System of Scholarly Publishing.
Whisler, Sandra
Rosenblatt, Susan F.
Academic Libraries
Cost Effectiveness
Costs
Electronic Journals
Electronic Publishing
Faculty Publishing
Higher Education
Information Dissemination
Information Technology
Library Collection Development
Nonprint Media
Publications
Publishing Industry
Research Libraries
Scholarly Communication
Scholarly Journals
University Presses
The Library and the University Press: Two Views of the Costs and Problems of the Current System of Scholarly Publishing. Whisler, Sandra Rosenblatt, Susan F. Academic Libraries Cost Effectiveness Costs Electronic Journals Electronic Publishing Faculty Publishing Higher Education Information Dissemination Information Technology Library Collection Development Nonprint Media Publications Publishing Industry Research Libraries Scholarly Communication Scholarly Journals University Presses The costs of scholarly publishing have become unsustainable for both research libraries and university presses. This paper discusses how the transition to electronic journal publishing changes the ways in which these two participants in the scholarly communication process begin to analyze and attempt to control their cost structures in order to remain economically viable. Libraries and their users will be reluctant to abandon a known archival format, and capital investments in the technical infrastructure needed to deliver scholarly information electronically may be made slowly. For publishers, the need to cover first copy costs and to continue serving a market demand for print will create a significant transitional period during which both print and electronic formats must be produced and funded. The transition to fully electronic publication, although likely to reduce operational costs for libraries slightly in the short run and significantly in the long run, creates potential revenue interruptions for presses. Many publishers have proposed pricing models for electronic journals that are based on existing print subscription prices and that include multi-year guarantees of price adjustments to cover both inflation and expansion in the content offered. Libraries are caught in the dilemma posed by many publishers' current pricing structures for electronic journals: the offer of a multi-year reduction in the rate of inflation in high-value commercial journals is attractive when compared to the anticipated inflation in print journals; yet accepting that model would protect a rising share of library collection budgets for high-inflation journals which would then rapidly crowd out other scholarly publications. The short-term measures that the library and press individually might rationally employ to maintain fiscal stability may have far reaching negative implications for the economic viability of the system of scholarly communication as a whole, particularly for the university presses. (Contains 22 references.) (AEF/Author)
title The Library and the University Press: Two Views of the Costs and Problems of the Current System of Scholarly Publishing.
topic Academic Libraries
Cost Effectiveness
Costs
Electronic Journals
Electronic Publishing
Faculty Publishing
Higher Education
Information Dissemination
Information Technology
Library Collection Development
Nonprint Media
Publications
Publishing Industry
Research Libraries
Scholarly Communication
Scholarly Journals
University Presses
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED414921