Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals
This is a preprint version of a paper submitted to the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. A study of ISI ranked Library and Information Science (LIS) journals (n=52) is reported. The study examined the stances of publishers as expressed in the Copyright Transfe...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1052922015-10-23T04:23:04Z Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals Coleman, Anita Sundaram Scholarly Communication This is a preprint version of a paper submitted to the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. A study of ISI ranked Library and Information Science (LIS) journals (n=52) is reported. The study examined the stances of publishers as expressed in the Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTAs) of the journals towards self-archiving, the practice of depositing digital copies of one's works, preferably in an OAI-compliant open access repository. Results show that 62 % (32) do not make their CTAs available on the open web; 38 % (20) do. Of the 38 % that have CTAs available, two are open access journals. Even among the 20 journal CTAs publicly available a high level of ambiguity exists. Of the 62 % that do not have a public CTA, 40 % are silent about self-archiving. Closer examination augmented by publisher policy documents on copyright, self-archiving, and author instructions, reveals that only five, 10% of the ISI-ranked LIS journals, actually prohibit self-archiving by publisher rule. Copyright transfer agreements are a moving target and publishers appear to be acknowledging that copyright and open access can co-exist in the scholarly journal publishing arena. Given the ambivalence of journal publishers, the communities might be better off by self-archiving in open access archives and strategically building an LIS information commons through a society-led global scholarly communication consortium. The aggregation of OAI-compliant archives and development of disciplinary-specific library services for an LIS commons has the potential to increase the field's research impact and visibility besides ameliorating its own scholarly communication and publishing systems, and serving as a model for others. 2006-01 Preprint Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals 2006-01, http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105292 en |
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en |
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Scholarly Communication |
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Scholarly Communication Coleman, Anita Sundaram Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals |
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This is a preprint version of a paper submitted to the Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology. A study of ISI ranked Library and Information Science (LIS) journals (n=52) is reported. The study examined the stances of publishers as expressed in the Copyright Transfer Agreements (CTAs) of the journals towards self-archiving, the practice of depositing digital copies of one's works, preferably in an OAI-compliant open access repository. Results show that 62 % (32) do not make their CTAs available on the open web; 38 % (20) do. Of the 38 % that have CTAs available, two are open access journals. Even among the 20 journal CTAs publicly available a high level of ambiguity exists. Of the 62 % that do not have a public CTA, 40 % are silent about self-archiving. Closer examination augmented by publisher policy documents on copyright, self-archiving, and author instructions, reveals that only five, 10% of the ISI-ranked LIS journals, actually prohibit self-archiving by publisher rule. Copyright transfer agreements are a moving target and publishers appear to be acknowledging that copyright and open access can co-exist in the scholarly journal publishing arena. Given the ambivalence of journal publishers, the communities might be better off by self-archiving in open access archives and strategically building an LIS information commons through a society-led global scholarly communication consortium. The aggregation of OAI-compliant archives and development of disciplinary-specific library services for an LIS commons has the potential to increase the field's research impact and visibility besides ameliorating its own scholarly communication and publishing systems, and serving as a model for others. |
author |
Coleman, Anita Sundaram |
author_facet |
Coleman, Anita Sundaram |
author_sort |
Coleman, Anita Sundaram |
title |
Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals |
title_short |
Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals |
title_full |
Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals |
title_fullStr |
Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals |
title_full_unstemmed |
Self-Archiving and the Copyright Transfer Agreements of ISI-Ranked Library and Information Science Journals |
title_sort |
self-archiving and the copyright transfer agreements of isi-ranked library and information science journals |
publishDate |
2006 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/105292 |
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AT colemananitasundaram selfarchivingandthecopyrighttransferagreementsofisirankedlibraryandinformationsciencejournals |
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