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Learned Publishing, Volume 15
Volume 15, Number 1, 2002
- Peter Fox:
Archiving of electronic publications - some thoughts on cost. 3-5 - Andrew M. Odlyzko:
The rapid evolution of scholarly communication. 7-19 - David Pullinger:
Instant linking - delayed use: setting provider expectations. 21-25 - Joost G. Kircz:
New practices for electronic publishing 2: New forms of the scientific paper. 27-32 - Richard T. Kaser:
Getting it! The added value of helping users find information. 33-42 - David Goodman:
A year without print at Princeton, and what we plan next. 43-50 - Diana Rosenberg:
African Journals Online: improving awareness and access. 51-57 - Yuehong Zhang:
Journal of Zhejiang University (SCIENCE): a new journal for the 21st century. 59-62 - Jane Dorner:
Authors and e-delivery. 63-68 - Bernard Naylor:
Size does matter. 69-70
Volume 15, Number 2, 2002
- Fytton Rowland:
What do users want? 83-84 - Kent R. Anderson:
The useful archive. 85-89 - Keith Silver:
Pressing the 'send' key - preferential journal access in developing countries. 91-98 - Michael Breaks:
Building the hybrid library: a review of UK activities. 99-107 - Andrew Berin:
Unbundled journals: trying to predict the future. 109-112 - Alastair Dryburgh:
There is no such thing as a product. 113-116 - Walt Crawford:
Free electronic refereed journals: getting past the arc of enthusiasm. 117-123 - Emily McElroy:
Dos and don'ts for electronic journal management: some advice to publishers. 125-128 - Carol Hansen Montgomery:
Print to electronic: measuring the operational and economic implications of an electronic journal collection. 129-136 - Leanne Wiseman:
Digital copying and the statutory licences in Australian universities. 137-147 - Yuehong Zhang, Sen Wang, Jiang Li:
The English-language academic journals of China: trends and developments. 149-151 - Lara Carim:
Serial killers: how great is the e-print threat to periodicals publishers? 153-155
Volume 15, Number 3, 2002
- John Cox:
Valuing and protecting our intellectual property: the lifeblood of our business. 163-164 - Christine Baldwin:
Delivering content to universities and colleges: JISC's new information environment. 165-174 - Hilda A. Cerdeira:
eJournals Delivery Service: an email to Internet experiment. 175-178 - Diann Rusch-Feja:
The Open Archives Initiative and the OAI Protocol for Metadata Harvesting: rapidly forming a new tier in the scholarly communication infrastructure. 179-186 - William P. Sisler:
One university press. 187-192 - David Finkelstein, Sarah Bromage, Alistair McCleery:
Scottish Archive of Print and Publishing History Records. 193-197 - Claire Ginn:
Calculating pricing models choices: rising to the challenge. 199-203 - The Knight Higher Education Collaborative: Op. cit.: publishing in the humanities and social sciences. 205-216
- Richard Gedye:
Non-subscription revenue as a source of income. 217-220 - Kate Worlock:
Electronic journals: user realities - the truth about content usage among the STM community. 223-226 - John H. Ewing:
In defense of caution. 231-233 - Julian D. Richards:
Internet Archaeology and the myth of free publication. 233-234 - Tim Albert:
A writer's diary in the year 2015. 234-235 - Andrea Powell:
Non-subscription revenue as a source of income. 238 - Cliff Morgan:
Free electronic refereed journals. 238-239
Volume 15, Number 4, 2002
- Ian Taylor:
Opening the journals market in China. 243-245 - Fytton Rowland:
The peer-review process. 247-258 - Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King:
Reading behaviour and electronic journals. 259-265 - Andrea Powell:
Linking to full text: the secondary publisher's perspective. 267-272 - Brian Cox:
The Pergamon phenomenon 1951-1991: Robert Maxwell and scientific publishing. 273-278 - Thomas J. Walker:
Two societies show how to profit by providing free access. 279-284 - Paul Harwood:
You are the weakest link - goodbye: serving the information-hungry corporate end-user. 285-290 - Tim Albert, Alex Williamson:
Medical journal publishing: one culture or several? 291-296 - David Bawden, Lyn Robinson:
Promoting literacy in a digital age: approaches to training for information literacy. 297-301 - Melinda Kenneway, Pam Sutherland, Samuel C. Williamson:
Introducing a new journals subscription system: the agony and the ecstasy. 302-306 - Ruth Jones:
Journals e-publishing: outsourced solutions for professional, scholarly and society publishers. 313-314 - Mark Doyle:
How to profit by providing free access. 315 - Michele Benjamin:
Editorial Acknowledgement. 318
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