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Re: Thoughts on Publishing Trends and OA scholarship
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Thoughts on Publishing Trends and OA scholarship
- From: Sandy Thatcher <sgt3@psu.edu>
- Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 18:30:40 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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Colin provides his usual perceptive comments and useful information here, and I agree with practically all of it. Regarding emerging new models that are akin to what Colin describes here, I would draw everyone's attention to the innovative Quadrant project, funded by Mellon, at the University of Minnesota involving its press, Institute for Advanced Study, and several research centers and departments: http://www.upress.umn.edu/html/mellonnews.html. Our Romance Studies monograph series, involving open access and POD, continues to develop, with three titles released at the end of 2007 and three more in the pipeline. My guess is that to succeed in the long run, our series will need to scale up to a multi-institutional enterprise. In the Internet age, as Joe has been pointing out, size matters. My skepticism about IRs is not that they won't provide a wealth of new material to the general public; it is just that I don't see how anyone can attempt an overall assessment of the quality of a university's research output by looking at what exists on its IR. To my mind also, the increasing use of quantitative metrics is a mixed blessing at best. Ultimately, it is quality that counts, and that is not easy to measure quantitatively. Sandy Thatcher Penn State University Press
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