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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Henderson, Kittie S., Bosch, Stephen
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ930069
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author Henderson, Kittie S.
Bosch, Stephen
author_facet Henderson, Kittie S.
Bosch, Stephen
Henderson, Kittie S.
Bosch, Stephen
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Seeking the New Normal: Periodicals Price Survey 2010 Henderson, Kittie S. Bosch, Stephen Libraries Cost Indexes Economic Impact Expenditures Retrenchment Budgeting Library Administration Journal Articles Change Strategies Organizational Change Sustainability Trend Analysis Library Materials Library Services The year 2009 will be remembered as one of angst, with the economy dominating news around the world. Few libraries were immune to the extraordinary financial pressures. The library marketplace by year's end was in a weakened position, with prospects of a long recovery at best. Concern persists that even deeper budget cuts will come when federal stimulus money expires in the 2012 budget cycle. Even when the economy improves, increased funds for libraries are not likely to be at the top of the list for new spending priorities. Libraries may not see a "return to normal" once the economy improves. Evidence suggests instead a search for a "new normal," one that requires varied approaches to services and collections. For example, the shift from print to digital is likely to accelerate greatly. The delivery of information might become more important than ownership. Open access business models might become more attractive to avoid the costly venues of commercial publishers. Much of the data reported in the Periodicals Price Survey 2010 outlines the issues that are shaping the journals marketplace. Data is primarily drawn from serial renewals of titles in three ISI databases--Arts and Humanities Citation Index, Social Sciences Citation Index, and Science Citation Index. In addition, data is included on titles in EBSCO's Academic Search Premier. Data is limited to prepriced print titles (as opposed to standing-order or bill-later titles) that can be ordered through a vendor and are current as of January 27, 2010. Cost data for electronic versions of journals is still not uniform enough to include in the pricing survey.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ930069
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Seeking the New Normal: Periodicals Price Survey 2010
Henderson, Kittie S.
Bosch, Stephen
Libraries
Cost Indexes
Economic Impact
Expenditures
Retrenchment
Budgeting
Library Administration
Journal Articles
Change Strategies
Organizational Change
Sustainability
Trend Analysis
Library Materials
Library Services
Seeking the New Normal: Periodicals Price Survey 2010 Henderson, Kittie S. Bosch, Stephen Libraries Cost Indexes Economic Impact Expenditures Retrenchment Budgeting Library Administration Journal Articles Change Strategies Organizational Change Sustainability Trend Analysis Library Materials Library Services The year 2009 will be remembered as one of angst, with the economy dominating news around the world. Few libraries were immune to the extraordinary financial pressures. The library marketplace by year's end was in a weakened position, with prospects of a long recovery at best. Concern persists that even deeper budget cuts will come when federal stimulus money expires in the 2012 budget cycle. Even when the economy improves, increased funds for libraries are not likely to be at the top of the list for new spending priorities. Libraries may not see a "return to normal" once the economy improves. Evidence suggests instead a search for a "new normal," one that requires varied approaches to services and collections. For example, the shift from print to digital is likely to accelerate greatly. The delivery of information might become more important than ownership. Open access business models might become more attractive to avoid the costly venues of commercial publishers. Much of the data reported in the Periodicals Price Survey 2010 outlines the issues that are shaping the journals marketplace. Data is primarily drawn from serial renewals of titles in three ISI databases--Arts and Humanities Citation Index, Social Sciences Citation Index, and Science Citation Index. In addition, data is included on titles in EBSCO's Academic Search Premier. Data is limited to prepriced print titles (as opposed to standing-order or bill-later titles) that can be ordered through a vendor and are current as of January 27, 2010. Cost data for electronic versions of journals is still not uniform enough to include in the pricing survey.
title Seeking the New Normal: Periodicals Price Survey 2010
topic Libraries
Cost Indexes
Economic Impact
Expenditures
Retrenchment
Budgeting
Library Administration
Journal Articles
Change Strategies
Organizational Change
Sustainability
Trend Analysis
Library Materials
Library Services
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ930069