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RE: AAAS and JSTOR issues
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: AAAS and JSTOR issues
- From: "Michael Spinella" <Michael.Spinella@jstor.org>
- Date: Sun, 16 Sep 2007 22:05:47 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
We value the discussion among listserv participants that has been sparked by David Carlson's posting regarding AAAS's decision to withdraw from JSTOR. As there have been several questions about our business model and agreements with publishers, we wanted to address and clarify some of the points raised by recent responses on the listserv and queries we have received. First, JSTOR has not developed a model for licensing the archive to for-profit institutions, and a handful of our publisher agreements prohibit us from making their back files available to this market. We have considered providing access to corporate libraries for the other titles and are open to exploring this idea with our participating publishers. In late 2006, we gave publishers the option to sell single articles through JSTOR. Roughly one-third of the journals in JSTOR are now including articles in this program and we believe this does meet some of the demand from corporate markets. We want to emphasize that JSTOR does not have exclusive arrangements with any publishers. Participating publishers are free to undertake other digitization and access projects or to license their content to other parties as they deem appropriate. Since its inception, JSTOR has been careful to consider the need for publishers to remain independent in pursuing their goals and business interests. The Moving Wall concept and programs enabling publishers to make their legacy content available to individual subscribers or members are examples of our approach. JSTOR has developed a content sharing program for publishers to enable them to use their legacy content as digitized by JSTOR to pursue their missions and goals without having to apply their own financial or staff resources to the digitization effort. (See our 2006 newsletter article about this at http://news.jstor.org/jstornews/2006/03/march_2006_no_10_issue_1_conte.html) One posting mentioned the possibility of relying on OpenURL linking and foregoing the need for curated aggregations of journal content. We certainly agree that there is value in finding better ways to aid users looking for content that may be widely distributed across the web. Even so, we believe there is value in aggregation, particularly in ensuring the viability and authenticity of an essential body of scholarly output over time. Long-term preservation and continued accessibility of the content in the archive are core features of JSTOR's mission. Therefore, a key component of all our publisher agreements is that, should a publisher terminate its agreement with JSTOR, the material included in the archive up to the point of termination will remain in the archive and will continue to be preserved by JSTOR and accessible to those institutions participating in the collection housing the content at the time of termination. Libraries with access to JSTOR's Health & General Sciences Collection in 2007 will continue to have access to Science (1880-2002) for the long term. Libraries relying on JSTOR as their archive can make decisions about moving print copies off site or de-accessioning and rest assured that journal volumes in the archive today will be there in the future. We also continually invest in making the archive more useful to researchers. For example, we are nearing completion of a very large project to identify and parse references throughout the 24-million-page archive to enable reference linking. Finally, we have been encouraged by the awareness that the aggregated nature of the JSTOR archive enables users to discover material relevant to their research in disciplinary fields they might not have otherwise explored. As boundaries between disciplines become more porous, this is especially important. We have received very positive feedback on the value of a "curated" collection and of the knowledge that material included in the JSTOR archive is from vetted sources. We were disappointed by AAAS's decision in part because we believe, as Margaret Landesman posited in her post, that inclusion in the archive made Science discoverable to a diverse audience of humanists and social scientists, while also providing a good complement to the 100+ sciences journals in the archive. However, we do not believe that this decision was the harbinger of a changing outlook for JSTOR. Indeed, since the AAAS's decision, JSTOR has signed over 60 additional titles-in the arts, humanities, social sciences, and sciences--from 26 publishers, including commercial and university presses, scholarly societies, and independent journals. The benefits of JSTOR participation continue to resonate with our over 460 publishers, and we continually work to develop new programs to help meet their objectives, and together to serve the scholarly community, in an increasingly digital landscape. Michael Spinella, Executive Director and Kimberly Lutz, Director of Publisher Relations JSTOR
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