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RE: math journal wars
I agree. Mr. Bak does not have the right to hold those submitted
manuscripts for possible publication in his new journal. They
were submitted to K-Theory, not to him. The Nature article
(Nature 448, 846-847 (23 August 2007) | doi:10.1038/448846b) says
that Bak has "offered authors publication" in his new journal,
but those manuscripts were never submitted to his new journal.
Scott
T. Scott Plutchak
Director, Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences
University of Alabama at Birmingham
tscott@uab.edu
-----Original Message-----
[mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Ann Okerson
Sent: Friday, August 24, 2007 8:19 AM
To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Subject: math journal wars
NOTE: The editor's behavior seems a little tacky... or what am I
missing here? Ann
>From CHE, 8/23/07:
Editor's Calculation in Starting New Math Journal Divides His
Editorial Board
After holding onto accepted manuscripts for more than a year, the
managing editor of a mathematics journal has announced he will
begin a competitor, according to the new issue of Nature.
The editor, Anthony Bak, a mathematician at the University of
Bielefeld, in Germany, was fired in January, having not published
any issues of the monthly journal K-Theory since April 2006. Mr.
Bak told Nature that he had left the journal because its
subscription costs were too high and because of production
problems at Springer, the journal's publisher.
The journal's Board of Editors resigned en masse with Mr. Bak,
echoing a move by the editors of another math journal, Topology,
who quit to protest its pricing policies and later announced
plans to create a cheaper rival. Springer did not learn of the
board resignations until May.
This month Mr. Bak announced that he would launch the Journal of
K-Theory, to be published by Cambridge University Press, at a
cheaper subscription rate.
But several of the editors who resigned with Mr. Bak declined to
follow him to the new journal because of his withholding of the
manuscripts, and two have even returned to the Springer journal.
However, they told Nature that the discipline was too small to
support two journals, and so they would publish in K-Theory only
the papers that had already been accepted.
Lila Guterman