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RE: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- From: "Rick Anderson" <rickand@unr.edu>
- Date: Mon, 2 Apr 2007 18:26:07 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
> I think print will continue to be necessary until we as a > profession can develop the confidence in e-archives that we now > have in print as an archival format. Will we ever develop that > confidence? What will it take? As time goes on, I think permanent archival access is going to be a central function for fewer libraries. During the print era, we all thought of ourselves as more-or-less permanent repositories of the information we selected. But we paid for permanence with breadth -- we could afford to house our journals permanently, but we couldn't afford to buy everything our patrons needed. Today we can flip that model: online access makes it possible for us to provide much more of the content our patrons want, but (in many cases) not to do so in a reliably permanent way. This means we have to ask ourselves a serious question: to what degree is permanence of access more important than breadth of coverage? I think the right answer will vary depending on the library. A big ARL should probably worry much more about permanence than a community-college library should. And it also probably depends on the kind of content. I think the important thing, though, is that we stop assuming that permanence is always a trump-card issue. --- Rick Anderson Dir. of Resource Acquisition University of Nevada, Reno Libraries rickand@unr.edu
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