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American Geophysical Union 2008 Journal Subscription Prices
American Geophysical Union Announces 2008 Subscription Prices
In 2008, AGU will continue the practice started in 2006 to charge
the subscriber only for the service being provided. Concretely,
this means that subscribers who want only the electronic version
will not bear the costs associated solely with the print product.
One major change for 2008 is the introduction of a new product.
Libraries will be able to access all AGU journals back from
volume 1, issue 1 and through 2002 plus hundreds of books. Access
to this digital library will be available through a yearly
institutional subscription at a very affordable price. A full
description of this new product can be found at
http://www.agu.org/pubs/DigitalLibDesc.pdf
For most AGU journals, 2008 prices for subscriptions to the
electronic version will remain unchanged or will record a modest
increase. For two journals and two sections of the Journal of
Geophysical Research, prices will actually decrease by as much as
10%. For three journals, rates will increase by 6% to 8%. This
increase is due to a surge in manuscript submission and the
additional manpower required to handle it.
Prices for subscriptions to the print version will generally
continue their upward trend. For several journals, AGU was able
to limit the increase to less than 10%. Unfortunately most of the
print-only subscription prices have increased more, between 11%
and 24%. The root of this increase is twofold. First, the ongoing
replacement of print subscriptions by online-only subscriptions
at many institutions has resulted in a smaller pool of
subscribers to support the cost of producing a print product.
Second, the overall cost of producing and mailing a print product
has greatly increased on its own, due to higher paper prices and
punishing new postal rates introduced in 2007. Basically, a
higher cost has to be distributed among a smaller number of
subscriptions. This trend is not expected to slow and there will
come a time when print will not be economically feasible.
The electronic version is the journal of record for AGU
publications. The medium offers speed and ease of publication as
well as new dynamic formats unavailable with a print product. AGU
has endeavored to create high quality electronic journals with
long term usability and reliability in mind.
Prices and terms can be found at
http://www.agu.org/pubs/Institution_Rates_2008.pdf
Judy C. Holoviak, Deputy Executive Director
and Director of Publications
--
Karine S. Blaufuss
Group Manager, Marketing & Membership
AGU
kblaufuss@agu.org
www.agu.org