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Libraries and Press at Johns Hopkins Sign Agreements with
Of possible interest.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 14 Aug 2006 13:57:38 EDT
From: LLK@press.jhu.edu
To: liblicen@pantheon.yale.edu
Subject: Libraries and Press at Johns Hopkins Sign Agreements with
Portico
August 14, 2006 - For Immediate Release
Libraries and Press at Johns Hopkins Sign Agreements with Portico
Non-Profit Service Provides Electronic Archiving of Scholarly
Journals
The Johns Hopkins University Press and University Libraries have
jointly announced their participation in Portico, a nonprofit
service that provides low-cost digital archiving for publishers
and guarantees preservation and access to libraries. Winston
Tabb, Sheridan dean of university libraries, and Kathleen Keane,
director of the JHU Press, signed licensing agreements at the end
of July that provide perpetual access to a permanent archive of
electronic scholarly journals.
"Portico provides a means to preserve scholarly literature
published in electronic form and ensures that these materials
remain accessible to future scholars, researchers, and students,"
commented Dean Tabb. "We are pleased to join our colleagues at
the Hopkins Press as Portico Archive Founders since the services
provided by Portico benefit both libraries and publishing
communities."
The agreement will provide the five Hopkins libraries guaranteed
access to Portico's full archive of an estimated 7,000 electronic
journals, thereby providing protection against the potential loss
of access to e-literature that is integral to the collection.
Currently, fifteen leading publishers have entrusted their
journals to the Portico archive, including Elsevier, Wiley, and
the American Institute of Physics. With one of the largest
journals publishing operations among university presses in the
United States, Hopkins Press will provide digital files for its
60 journals to Portico for long term storage. "A real benefit
for presses is that Portico plans to manage an archival function
for our library customers," noted Press Director Kathleen Keane.
"It would be a significant expense for each publisher to do this
independently, so Portico and its funders are providing an
extremely valuable service for publishers and libraries who want
to ensure that their electronic publications will be available
for the long term."
Portico does not replace agreements between publishers and
libraries for access to electronic publications; rather, it
guarantees preservation and permanent access to electronic
materials under circumstances such as a publisher ceasing
operations or the catastrophic and sustained failure of a
publishers' delivery platform. It relieves both libraries and
publishers of the burden and expense of creating and sustaining
permanent electronic archives.
Portico began as the Electronic-Archiving Initiative launched by
JSTOR in 2002 with a grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
In 2004, the Electronic-Archiving Initiative became a part of
Ithaka Harbors, Inc., and an electronic archiving service, known
as Portico, was developed and launched in 2005 with additional
support from JSTOR, Ithaka, The Library of Congress, and The
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Now that Portico is operational,
participating publishers and libraries agree to pay an annual fee
to sustain the archive.
The Johns Hopkins University Press was founded in 1878 and is
America's oldest university press. The Johns Hopkins University
libraries include the Milton S. Eisenhower Library, the Welch
Medical Library, the Arthur Friedheim Library at the Peabody
Institute, the R.E. Gibson Library at the Applied Physics
Laboratory, and the Sidney R. and Elsa W. and Mason Library at
the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.
Together these collections provide the research library resources
for the university, serving Hopkins' academic programs worldwide.
For more information about Portico, visit http://www.portico.org.
For information about participation in Portico at Johns Hopkins,
contact Bill Breichner at the JHU Press at 410-516-6985; or
Pamela Higgins at the JHU Libraries at 410-516-8337.
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