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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: "Eileen Fenton" <Eileen.Fenton@portico.org>
- Date: Thu, 5 Apr 2007 18:29:54 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Rick quite rightly notes that the economics of electronic resources have flipped some of the dynamics we knew so well in the print world. Embedded in this flip, however, may be new opportunities. Not only can smaller libraries pursue a greater breadth of electronic collections, but through community-based archives, such as Portico or other initiatives, they can also support long-term preservation of critical e-resources by contributing only a fraction of the total preservation costs. This opportunity for cost sharing is especially important because as libraries' electronic collections grow in breadth, local preservation needs may actually become more rather than less pressing, regardless of institution size. >From our early work on the Portico archive we have seen that libraries from across the spectrum (and around the world) are willing to contribute to support of a community-based permanent archive. This response suggests that libraries - large and small - believe that action to ensure permanent access to the scholarly record is just as vital to the teaching and education mission of their parent institutions as is the provision of current access to a breadth of materials. One important benefit of addressing long-term preservation and access needs in a collaborative manner is that we avoid placing the full burden and expense on the shoulders of just a few generous, large institutions. Eileen Fenton Executive Director, Portico -----Original Message----- [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Rick Anderson Sent: Monday, April 02, 2007 6:26 PM To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: RE: Is it time to stop printing journals? > 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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