Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 16, Issue 4

243 -- 247Peter Davison. Reprographic rights in Singapore: the story of CLASS
249 -- 258Kathleen Wets, Dave Weedon, Jan Velterop. Post-publication filtering and evaluation: Faculty of 1000
259 -- 263Esharenana E. Adomi, Chinedum Mordi. Publication in foreign journals and promotion of academics in Nigeria
265 -- 270Alastair Dryburgh. Alternative futures for academic and professional publishing
271 -- 276Mats G. Lindquist. Organization and technology for the recording of science
277 -- 283Kimberly Beckwith. Googled: the quest for visibility on the Internet
285 -- 289Greg Tananbaum. Of wolves and and boys: the scholarly communication crisis
290 -- 292Judith Harvey. What does ZWOLLE stand for?
293 -- 308Elizabeth Gadd, Charles Oppenheim, Steve G. Probets. RoMEO studies 4: an analysis of journal publishers' copyright agreements
316 -- 0Kurt Paulus. Letter to the Editor

Volume 16, Issue 3

163 -- 166David C. Prosser. From here to there: a proposed mechanism for transforming journals from closed to open access
167 -- 169Jan Velterop. Should scholarly societies embrace open access (or is it the kiss of death)?
171 -- 176Sally Morris. Open publishing
177 -- 181Eric Hellman. OpenURL: making the link to libraries
183 -- 188Bas Savenije. The FIGARO project: a new approach towards academic publishing
189 -- 192Alan Singleton. Terrorism, the publishing decision and beyond
193 -- 199Louisa Ha. The economics of scholarly journals: a case study on a society-published journal
201 -- 205Peter T. Shepherd. COUNTER: from conception to compliance
207 -- 211Thomas Connertz. Long-term archiving of digital documents: what efforts are being made in Germany?
213 -- 217Deborah Kahn. Perceptions of the customer

Volume 16, Issue 2

83 -- 84Sally Morris. Open sesame?
85 -- 90Louise Watts. Document supply: the evolving needs of the library
91 -- 94Yuehong Zhang, Yachun Yuan, Yufei Jiang. An international peer-review system for a Chinese scientific journal
95 -- 101Alastair Dryburgh. A new framework for digital publishing decisions
103 -- 109Mark Bide. Copyright and the network
111 -- 122Colin Steele. Phoenix rising: new models for the research monograph?
123 -- 128Mark S. Frankel. Seizing the moment: scientists' authorship rights in the digital age
129 -- 133Michael Upshall. Content management for journal publishers
134 -- 138Heather Dalterio Joseph. BioOne: building a sustainable alternative publishing model for non-profit publishers
139 -- 142Alan Turner, Pippa Steele. Archiving - the full-text solution: an innovative way to electronic archiving
143 -- 148Pippa Smart. E-journals: developing country access survey
149 -- 152David J. Powell. Voluntary deposit of electronic publications: a learning experience
153 -- 155Frederick J. Friend. Big Deal - good deal? Or is there a better deal?

Volume 16, Issue 1

3 -- 4Andrea Powell. ALPSP and its Strategy
5 -- 0Robert Welham. Editorial
7 -- 14Mary Waltham. Challenges to the role of publishers
15 -- 20Alex Williamson. What will happen to peer review?
21 -- 27Max Lagnado. Professional writing assistance: effects on biomedical publishing
28 -- 33Alma Swan, Sheridan Brown. Authors and electronic publishing: what authors want from the new technology
34 -- 46Donald Klein, Mark Ware. E-learning: new opportunities in continuing professional development
47 -- 53David Kohl. Consortial licensing vs. tradition: breaking up is hard to do
54 -- 60Carole Pearce. Editing an African scholarly journal
61 -- 69Alan Gilchrist. Text retrieval: an overview
70 -- 73David Taylor. E-books and the academic market: the emerging supply chain
75 -- 76Alastair Dryburgh. Open-access journals - nice idea, shame about the numbers?