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RE: Authors rights: Going too far
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: Authors rights: Going too far
- From: "George Porter" <george@library.caltech.edu>
- Date: Thu, 13 Mar 2008 19:29:31 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Heather Morrison raises an interesting question. > "Perhaps it is timely for collections librarians to add > Author's Rights as a key criterion, when evaluating journal > subscriptions to add, or to cancel?" Contrary to Joseph Esposito's response, and an orthogonal comment from Phil Davis, Heather comment is controversial insomuch as it posits a future criterion. The time arrived at least a few years ago for Authors' Rights concerns to be a part of the subscription evaluation process in academic and research libraries. liblicense-l, of all discussion fora, is not a place to question whether or not the subscription/licensing terms are relevant in making collections decisions. A full consideration of publishers' policies includes: * subscription fees, if any * access restrictions * access statistics supplied by vendor to subscriber * publisher platform compatibility with standards-based link resolver technologies * page charges * color charges * authors' rights/author-publisher contracts &/or licenses In point of fact, these considerations are relevant whether or not a subscription decision is being made. Caltech Library Services <http://library.caltech.edu/> provides a number of services for affiliated authors <http://library.caltech.edu/authors/authorservices.htm>. We have posted a couple of recent analyses of journals <http://library.caltech.edu/authors/journalanalyses.htm> which solicited articles or peer review services by Caltech faculty. [Analyses were requested by the faculty. Posting of the analyses was done with their knowledge and permission.] The manner in which a publisher addresses issues of authors' rights is not an overriding concern in institutional subscription decisions. It is certainly a matter which librarians assess and understand. Authors' rights policies are an essential part of the context a journal plays in the scholarly communication environment. Surely no one here has forgotten the lessons learned from Gordon & Breach. G&B are no longer a going concern due solely to egregious pricing. G&B attempted to abrogate fair use/fair dealing/moral rights/interlibrary lending through contract law embedded in subscription agreements. The cancellations which rippled across the globe were a reaction by authors and libraries to the stranglehold G&B attempted to maintain on the intellectual content. Librarians are unlikely to forbid authors from submitting their work to specific journals or publishers. They may, however, provide data and tools (guidance and advice, when asked for opinion) about the state of authors' rights, fees (subscription & author based), visibility via indexing, accessibility (large subscription base or toll free access), average delay between submission/acceptance/publication, and other factors, but specifically within the context of the author/reviewer's field of interest. Tools of note, for librarians and authors, include EigenFactor <http://eigenfactor.org/> and the Journal Cost-Effectiveness Calculator <http://journalprices.com/>. George S. Porter Sherman Fairchild Library of Engineering & Applied Science California Institute of Technology Mail Code 1-43, Pasadena, CA 91125-4300 Telephone (626) 395-3409 Fax (626) 431-2681
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