A research review for librarians working with electronic serials and licensing agreements in the age of the Internet and distance education

Author:

Miller Lindsey,Peters Kimberly,Pappano Mary,Manuel Kate

Abstract

Today, libraries within all institutions of higher education are viewing serials collection development in a new light. This paper looks at the issues revolving around these new dynamics, including distance education, electronic serials and how librarians should proceed in the near future. Much change is expected in US Copyright law. At the time of writing the US Register of Copyright issued a substantial report on how copyright will be viewed in our new digital era. This paper aims to provide new answers, and ask new questions the library literature has yet to examine.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,General Business, Management and Accounting

Reference63 articles.

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2. Association of Research Libraries (1997), License Review and Negotiation: Building a Team‐Based Institutional Process: An ARL Workshop on Licensing Electronic Information Resources, Association of Research Libraries, Washington, DC.

3. Branin, J.J. and Case, M. (1998), “Reforming scholarly publishing in the sciences: a librarian perspective”, Notices of the AMS, Vol. 45, pp. 475‐86.

4. Brennan, P., Hersey, K. and Harper, G. (1997), Licensing Electronic Resources: Strategic and Practical Considerations for Signing Electronic Information Delivery Agreements, Association of Research Libraries, Washington, DC.

5. Davis, T.L. (1997), “License agreements in lieu of copyright: are we signing away our rights?”, Library Acquisitions: Practice & Theory, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 19‐27.

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1. Legal aspects of the web;Annual Review of Information Science and Technology;2005-09-22

2. The future role of librarians in the virtual library environment;The Australian Library Journal;2002-01

3. “Fast track” transition to an electronic journal collection: a case study;New Library World;2000-12-01

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