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RE: Announcment: Oxford Journals signs archive agreement with Portico
***Apologies for cross posting***
Please find below information that may be of interest.
You can also read this press release online at
http://www.oxfordjournals.org/news/2006/03/13/third_archiving_deal_for_o
xford_/third_archiving_deal_for_oxford_.html
For further information please contact:
Mithu Mukherjee
Communications Executive
Oxford Journals
+44(0)1865 354471
mithu.mukherjee@oxfordjournals.org
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Third archiving deal for Oxford Journals guarantees long term
preservation of electronic content
Oxford Journals, a division of Oxford University Press, has
signed a key archiving agreement with Portico, an electronic
archiving service launched in 2005 with funding from
JSTOR[http://www.jstor.org/], The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
[http://www.mellon.org/], Ithaka [http://www.ithaka.org/], and
The Library of Congress [http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/].
The agreement assures robust long-term preservation and ongoing
access to Oxford Journals electronic content.
This is the third major archiving agreement* that Oxford Journals
is participating in, as part of their commitment to ensure long
term accessibility to all journals content. In 2004, Oxford
Journals became one of the first publishers to sign an archiving
agreement with the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (KB), the National
Library of the Netherlands, and in 2005 became a member of the
LOCKSS preservation initiative from Stanford University. By
signing this new agreement with Portico, Oxford Journals now have
an enhanced ability to offer perpetual access, back-up archiving,
and access facilities for all participating journals.
Martin Richardson, Managing Director of Oxford Journals,
commented: "The agreement with Portico makes a firm statement to
our customers and publishing partners that we are taking a
responsible approach to digital archiving. We are committed to
ensuring that access to our electronic content is safeguarded for
the future.
"The agreement with Portico offers a further development to our
archive provisions, by not only preserving an exact copy of
journal content, but by also ensuring the usability of the
archived content over time by migrating the files to future file
formats as technology evolves. This approach of Portico is
consistent with our strategy of establishing multiple, long-term
preservation archives for our content, using a variety of
different technologies."
"We are delighted that the Oxford Journals electronic content
will be added to the Portico archive. As electronic journals
have become a more and more important part of the scholarly
record, robust, multi-layered archival arrangements have become
an increasingly urgent requirement. We look forward to
incorporating Oxford Journals content into Portico's active
archive operations, and are pleased to serve as the secure
repository of this portion of the scholarly record" said Eileen
Fenton, Executive Director, Portico.
* Oxford Journals is also currently participating with a further
three initiatives, all in development: CLOCKSS (Controlled
LOCKSS) is a two year pilot from the LOCKSS initiative,
investigating a failsafe repository to ensure delivery of content
in the event of a disaster; The British Library Legal Deposit
E-Journal Pilot Project is currently testing the feasibility and
technical requirements needed to store e-journal content on a
legal deposit basis; and Oxford Journals is also participating in
the Library of Congress Pilot Testing of Voluntary Copyright
Deposits project.
END
Notes for Editors
Portico is a new, not-for-profit electronic archiving service
established in response to the library community's need for a
robust, reliable means to preserve electronic scholarly journals.
Portico was initiated by JSTOR and has been developed with the
initial support of Ithaka, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and
the Library of Congress. Portico's mission is to preserve
scholarly literature published in electronic form and to ensure
that these materials remain accessible to future scholars,
researchers, and students. For more information about Portico,
please visit http://www.portico.org.
Oxford University Press (OUP)[www.oup.co.uk], a department of the
University of Oxford, is the world's largest and most
international university press. Founded in 1478, it currently
publishes more than 4,500 new books a year, has a presence in
over fifty countries, and employs some 3,700 people worldwide. It
has become familiar to millions through a diverse publishing
programme that includes scholarly works in all academic
disciplines, bibles, music, school and college textbooks,
children's books, materials for teaching English as a foreign
language, business books, dictionaries and reference books, and
journals. Read more about OUP [www.oup.com/about]
Oxford Journals [www.oxfordjournals.org], a Division of OUP,
publishes over 180 journals covering a broad range of subject
areas, two-thirds of which are published in collaboration with
learned societies and other international organizations. The
collection contains some of the world's most prestigious titles,
including Nucleic Acids Research, JNCI (Journal of the National
Cancer Institute), Brain, Human Reproduction, English Historical
Review, and the Review of Financial Studies. Read more about
Oxford Journals [www.oxfordjournals.org /about_us.html]
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