Abstract
Purpose
– The purpose of this paper is to report on current interlending and document delivery of e-books and e-journals in the UK and analyse the challenges encountered in such practices, using the experiences at King's College London as an example.
Design/methodology/approach
– The author uses a case study approach.
Findings
– Most UK libraries and higher education institutions negotiate the usage terms for their e-resources through Jisc's NESLI2 model license agreement. While the terms of this agreement work relatively well for document delivery of e-journal articles, allowing for secure electronic document transmission under prescribed circumstances, the interlending of e-books remains problematic.
Research limitations/implications
– The paper provides insight into how UK document supply services can better use electronic holdings to offset the costs of requesting. It discusses the dilemma of e-books and potential solutions.
Practical implications
– This will enable UK library professionals to better use e-resources in a legally compliant way for the purpose of document delivery. It will explain to non-UK library professionals how supplying from e-resources works in the UK.
Originality/value
– The paper provides insight into how UK document supply services can better use electronic holdings to offset the costs of requesting. It discusses the dilemma of e-books and potential solutions.
Subject
Library and Information Sciences
Reference3 articles.
1. OCLC
(2013), “Article exchange: secure, copyright-compliant delivery of documents”, available at: www.oclc.org/resource-sharing/features/articleexchange.en.html (accessed 29 September 2013).
2. Schmidt, L.M.
(2013), “From the editor: e-books building the new subscription library”, Journal of Interlibrary Loan, Document Delivery & Electronic Reserve, Vol. 23 No. 1, pp. 1-3.
3. Weible, C.L.
and
Sullivan, H.F.
(2012), “E-ILL and Russian e-books”, Interlending & Document Supply, Vol. 40 No. 3, pp. 140-143.
Cited by
2 articles.
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