Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 21, Issue 4

244 -- 246Janet Fisher. What do our readers want? Results of the 2008 reader survey
248 -- 272Donald W. King, Frances M. Alvarado-Albertorio. Pricing and other means of charging for scholarly journals: a literature review and commentary
273 -- 277Cliff Morgan. Journal article version nomenclature: the NISO/ALPSP recommendations
278 -- 284Sanford G. Thatcher. China's copyright dilemma
285 -- 294Amy J. Kirchhoff. Digital preservation: challenges and implementation
295 -- 299Peter Givler. Seeking balance: rights and exceptions in Section 108 of the US Copyright Act
300 -- 306Greg Tananbaum, Lyndon Holmes. The evolution of Web-based peer-review systems
307 -- 318Yanping Lu. Peer review and its contribution to manuscript quality: an Australian perspective
319 -- 321Ellen Raphael. The publisher's role in promoting peer review
322 -- 324Joshua B. Illig, David Sampson. Event knowledge: a biomedical resource (r)evolution
325 -- 327Jean Dartnall. Are indexes worth it? Evidence from book reviews
329 -- 331Alan Singleton. Citation Statistics
333 -- 0Pippa Smart. SPEC Kit 299: Scholarly Communication Education Initiatives, August 2007 and SPEC Kit 300: Open Access Resources, September 2007

Volume 21, Issue 3

163 -- 165Sally Morris. The tiger in the corner
167 -- 175Duncan Calow, Rebecca Egan. Is the answer still in the machine: do publishers need digital rights management?
176 -- 186Robert Bley. Library systems in the electronic era
187 -- 192Françoise Vandooren, Cécile Gass. Giving new life to out-of-print books: when publishers' and libraries' interests meet
193 -- 199Terry Bucknell. Usage statistics for Big Deals: supporting library decision-making
200 -- 208Claire Bird. Oxford Journals' adventures in open access
209 -- 213Bridget M. Noonan, Debra Parrish. Expressions of concern and their uses
214 -- 224Claire Creaser, Sonya White. Trends in journal prices: an analysis of selected journals, 2000-2006
225 -- 235John J. Regazzi, Selenay Aytac. Author perceptions of journal quality
237 -- 0Paul Peters. Developing Open Access Journals: A Practical Guide - David Solomon
238 -- 0Charles Oppenheim. Scholarship in the Digital Age: Information, Infrastructure and the Internet - Christine Borgman

Volume 21, Issue 2

83 -- 84Priscilla S. Markwood. The NIH mandate - we're not in Kansas any more
85 -- 91James Pringle. Trends in the use of ISI citation databases for evaluation
93 -- 102Tarja Koskinen-Olsson. Access to knowledge in the digital era
105 -- 109Evelyn Jabri. A day in the life of an academic chemist
110 -- 115Charlie Rapple. Knowledge bases: improving the information supply chain
116 -- 122Irene Perciali, Aaron Edlin. Journals at bepress: new twists on an old model
123 -- 131Erik Sandewall. Extending the concept of publication: factbases and knowledgebases
133 -- 139Paul Harwood, Albert Prior. Testing usage-based e-journal pricing
140 -- 152Wei Hong Cheng, Shengli Ren. Evolution of open access publishing in Chinese scientific journals
154 -- 156Greg Tananbaum. Adventures in open data
158 -- 0Charles Oppenheim. Book Review

Volume 21, Issue 1

4 -- 6Sally Morris. What is quality in journals publishing?
7 -- 14Mary Waltham. What do society and association members really want?
15 -- 21Robin Derricourt. For a few dollars more: a future for scholarly books in Australia?
22 -- 28Mark Ware. Choosing a publishing partner: advice for societies and associations
29 -- 38Christine L. Borgman. Data, disciplines, and scholarly publishing
39 -- 47Dan Penny. Publishing technologies: what does the future hold?
48 -- 57Gayle Baker, Eleanor J. Read. Vendor-supplied usage data for electronic resources: a survey of academic libraries
58 -- 62Vanessa Lafaye. Compass Journals
63 -- 72Peter R. Strickland, Brian McMahon, John R. Helliwell. Integrating research articles and supporting data in crystallography
74 -- 75Stephen K. Donovan. On accuracy in references
77 -- 0Robert Welham. Book Review
78 -- 0Peter Shepherd. Letter to the Editors