[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: News Release: Project Transfer
Joe and all: Having been in circumstances wherein a learned
journal's contract with current publisher is ending and we are
reviewing new proposals: there can be mission-critical reasons
for increase in prices. In the most recent situation that I know,
the current publisher is not well able to provide for the needed
expansion and infrastructure of said journal. Even staying with
the same publisher would lead to a larger price increase; moving
will facilitate and enable the journal's projected, appropriate
growth -- which will thus raise the subscriber cost more than we
(librarians) might have expected. Nonetheless, it is beneficial
to move, etc.
A responsible journal will describe and explain such a decision.
There can be many reasons for prices to increase, and one
shouldn't be quick to always blame a change of publisher for
that, without having more facts to hand. But we should and can
ask for facts. Ann Okerson/Yale Library
On Thu, 10 May 2007, Joseph J. Esposito wrote:
The proposed Code of Practice appears to be a good idea. It
may have some unintended consequences, however, which
participants in scholarly communications may wish to consider.
The Code is for "Journals Transferring Between Publishers."
You may well ask why journals transfer. There are many
reasons, but to name just a few: money, access to technology,
new managment, and marketing. While there are exceptions,
transfers typically occur from small publishers to larger ones
(which may themselves be not-for-profit) and often from
not-for-profit publishers to commercial organizations.
Members of this list may wish to confirm or challenge my
hypothesis that journals that transfer are more likely to have
above-average price increases than journals that do not
transfer.
Thus the Code, which facilitates transfer, is likely to result
in a smooth transfer AND higher prices. Is the Code a good
idea? Yes. Are higher prices a good idea? It depends on
whether you are buying or selling.
Joe Esposito
----- Original Message -----
From: "Acreman, Beverley" <Beverley.Acreman@tandf.co.uk>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, May 09, 2007 8:50 AM
Subject: News Release: Project Transfer
UKSG Working Group "Project Transfer" invites Publishers to
sign-up to an agreed Code of Practice to Improve Procedures
for Journals Transferring Between Publishers
Oxford, UK - 9th May 2007- Project Transfer is inviting
publishers to sign up to a Code of Practice which aims to
improve the procedures and policies surrounding the transfer
of journals between publishers. The Code has been drafted with
extensive help from many of the major international publishing
houses and has already been applauded as an excellent step
forward by the contributing library community.
The Code outlines a set of guidelines for both the
Transferring and the Receiving publisher in any journal
transfer. Comprehensive in its detail, the Code covers the
thorny issues of ongoing access provision to online content,
exchange of subscriber lists, DOI and URL transfer as well as
the division and definition of born-digital versus newly
digitized backfile content.
The Project Transfer Working Group is inviting publishers to
sign up to this Code through the Project website:
<http://www.projecttransfer.org/> where the Code of Practice
can also be found. Full details of the Code were launched at
the UKSG Annual Conference in Warwick (16-18 April 2007).
More information is available on the UKSG website: www.uksg.org/transfer
Bev Acreman
pp UKSG