Making the most of electronic journals
Steve Hitchcock, Les Carr, Wendy Hall

TL;DR
This paper discusses the limitations of traditional print-based models in electronic journal publishing and advocates for a new, distinctive publishing approach that addresses user needs, rights management, and archive linking.
Contribution
It proposes a new publishing model for e-journals, emphasizing linked archives, rights management, and four steps towards optimal electronic journal development.
Findings
Broad user interest in comprehensive linked archives
Challenges with exclusive rights for publishers
Four proposed steps for improving e-journals
Abstract
As most electronic journals available today have been derived from print originals, print journals have become a vital element in the broad development of electronic journals publishing. Further dependence on the print publishing model, however, will be a constraint on the continuing development of e-journals, and a series of conflicts are likely to arise. Making the most of e-journals requires that a distinctive new publishing model is developed. We consider some of the issues that will be fundamental in this new model, starting with user motivations and some reported publisher experiences, both of which suggest a broadening desire for comprehensive linked archives. This leads in turn to questions about the impact of rights assignment by authors, in particular the common practice of giving exlusive rights to publishers for individual works. Some non-prescriptive solutions are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Rights Management and Security · Copyright and Intellectual Property · Library Collection Development and Digital Resources
