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Analog to Digital Query
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: Analog to Digital Query
- From: "Michael Carroll" <Carroll@law.villanova.edu>
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 2008 21:49:54 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Dear all, Can anyone point me to published articles, other resources, or even your own recollections about how libraries built and shared their collections of peer reviewed journals in the pre-digital era? I'm particularly interested in the question of whether the practical loss of libraries' first sale rights has had an impact on the circulation of this literature or its price. (As you probably know, copyright law's first sale doctrine gives the purchaser of a copy the right to sell or lend that copy without having to ask the copyright owner's permission. When a library licenses access to a publisher's database instead of purchasing copies, the library no longer owns copies that it can lend (through ILL) or sell in a market for used serials.) Specifically, was (and is) there a market for used, peer reviewed serials (bound or unbound)? If so, I'm interested in the details. Why would a library sell these? (Owned more than one set? No longer collecting in particular discipline?) Who were the purchasers? Thanks in advance, Michael W. Carroll Professor of Law Villanova University School of Law Villanova, PA 19085 Research papers: http://law.bepress.com/michael_carroll http://ssrn.com/author=330326 blog: http://www.carrollogos.org/ See also www.creativecommons.org
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