[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
STM ISSUES POSITION FOR CUSTOMERS' ONLINE ACCESS WHEN SOCIETY JOURNALS CHANGE PUBLISHERS
Of possible interest for readers.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 7 Aug 2006 13:09:24 +0200
From: Linda Young <Linda@stm.nl>
To: Ann Okerson <ann.okerson@yale.edu>
Subject: STM ISSUES POSITION FOR CUSTOMERS' ONLINE ACCESS WHEN SOCIETY
JOURNALS CHANGE PUBLISHERS
Contact: Michael Mabe
E-mail: linda@stm.nl
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
STM ISSUES POSITION FOR CUSTOMERS' ONLINE ACCESS WHEN SOCIETY JOURNALS
CHANGE PUBLISHERS
London, England, 4 August 2006 - The International Association of
Scientific, Technical & Medical Publishers (STM) a trade
association has issued a position 'Ensuring Quality Customer
Access to Online Content when Society Journals Change
Publishers.'
Many STM members publish scholarly journals on behalf of
scientific or medical societies. When such societies change
publishers (as contract terms expire), or when societies elect to
begin or reinitiate their own direct publishing efforts, there
are often important transitional questions not always dealt with
clearly in the underlying contracts. Of most importance to
library customers and end-user researchers is any potential
impact concerning access to electronic journals, especially when
those journals are hosted on specialized online platforms.
'Researcher access to online scientific content should never be
held ransom because of a business transition," said Michael Mabe,
CEO of STM. 'STM publishers must work together cooperatively to
ensure seamless transitions that minimize interruptions.'
STM has identified certain core principles that should govern
such transitions, although of course it does not intend in any
way to interfere with existing contractual relationships.
The core principles are:
* The prior publisher should be able to continue to offer access
(on a non-exclusive basis) to previously licensed journal content
under, and according to the terms and conditions of, existing
customer licenses;
* The prior and new publishers should work together to minimise
disruption to used by sending out joint communications and
co-ordinating work on changing the access arrangements; and
* The new publisher should aim to provide access on-line as soon
as reasonable practical after the transition.
STM believes that these principles outlined are equally
applicable to general transfers or acquisitions of a journal or a
portfolio of journal titles (whether or not society-owned) and
applicable as well when societies decide to bring this publishing
activity (back) in-house.
STM salutes the work of other associations and publishing group
on these issues, particularly the UK Serials Group working group
"Transfer" (see http://www.uksg.org/transfer.asp). and ALPSP in
its Advice Note 18 called "When a society journal changes
publisher" (see http://www.alpsp.org/socjourn1.pdf). More work
is needed in this area to ensure greater efficiencies in such
transitions, while at the same time respecting the overall
competitive environment from a business perspective.
The International Association of Scientific, Technical & Medical
Publishers (STM) is a global trade association with approximately
100 member publishing organisations, both large and small, and
for-profit and not-for-profit, collectively responsible for about
50% of the global output of research articles each year. STM's
mission is assisting publishers and their authors with their
activities by disseminating results of STM research, assisting
national and international organisations and industries to
improve electronic dissemination of STM information, and working
with international and national publishers associations and other
governmental and professional bodies, concerned with these tasks.
#####