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Re: OA monographs



I would have thought that author posting of a complete monograph was as competitive with the publisher's own version as a complete journal, rather than an individual article. Of course, not all publishers yet publish monographs online, though a growing number do. Some publishers have found that online publication boosts print sales, but others have found the opposite.

Sally Morris, Chief Executive
Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers
Email: sally.morris@alpsp.org

----- Original Message -----
From: "JOHANNES VELTEROP" <velteropvonleyden@btinternet.com>
To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2006 1:37 AM
Subject: Re: OA monographs

Not a direct answer, but possibly some reasons why:

Journal articles are in the main subject to 'publish or perish'. Monographs not. The ideal copyright line for a journal author is: "(c) Me. Please copy this article as often as possible and distribute it as widely as possible. Just make sure you acknowledge that it's mine."

That makes open access superbly suitable for journal articles -- primary research articles. That should make such journal articles also quite naturally follow the model of advertising (despite the differences): originator-side payment.

This *may* apply to monographs (there are monographs that are published with subsidies -- if the subsidy is sufficient, those could easily be published online with open access instead); it *does* apply to research journals.

Another difference is that the decision to publish is the editors' for journal articles, but the publishers' for monographs, making a 'financial firewall' and therefore a 'vanity publishing barrier' rather more difficult.

Jan Velterop


----- Original Message ----
From: Brian Simboli <brs4@lehigh.edu>
To: SPARC-OAForum@arl.org; liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Sent: Tuesday, 18 July, 2006 11:11:24 PM
Subject: OA monographs

(cross-posted)

A question that I posed to another listserv, but that might be germane to soaf and liblicense.

Is there is an OA movement, akin to the "green rights movement" with respect to journals, to beseech publishers to allow authors to post a copy of their monographs on the web? If not, why hasn't this been an emphasis?

The difference here would be that green rights are rights to self-archive some version of already publisher-published ejournal articles, whereas this would be a case of authors gaining rights to publish electronically monographs that are sometimes available from the publisher only in paper and sometimes also electronically available.

Brian Simboli
Science Librarian
Library & Technology Services
E.W. Fairchild Martindale
Lehigh University
Bethlehem, PA 18015-3170
E-mail: brs4@lehigh.edu