Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 24, Issue 4

245 -- 246Diane Scott-Lichter. Got content, get attention
247 -- 259Michael Jubb, Joel Cook, Daniel Hulls, David Jones, Mark Ware. Costs, risks and benefits in improving access to journal articles
261 -- 265David Myers. Selling to the BRIC: Brazil - an awakening tiger
267 -- 277Julia M. Wallace. PEER: green open access - insight and evidence
279 -- 286Peter T. Shepherd. PIRUS2: individual article usage statistics - developing a practical, global standard
287 -- 298Philip M. Davis. Do discounted journal access programs help researchers in sub-Saharan Africa? A bibliometric analysis
299 -- 302Xiao-Jun He, Zhen-Ying Chen. Profit or access: which is more important for Chinese medical journals?
303 -- 310Fereshteh Didegah, Ali Gazni. The extent of concentration in journal publishing
311 -- 324Chris Armbruster. Open access policy implementation: first results compared
325 -- 328Lutz Bornmann, Hans-Dieter Daniel. Seasonal bias in editorial decisions? A study using data from chemistry
331 -- 332Anji Pratap. Publishing Law
332 -- 334Cindy Clark. E-books in Libraries: A Practical Guide/The 2011 Guide to Free or Nearly-Free e-Books

Volume 24, Issue 3

162 -- 163Alan Singleton. The pain of rejection
164 -- 165Erin M. Macri, Karim M. Khan. Single-blind peer review: an appropriate compromise between two ideals?
165 -- 167David L. Vaux. Double blind review
171 -- 181Robert Campbell, Alice Meadows. Scholarly journal publishing: where do we go from here?
183 -- 195Ian Rowlands, David Nicholas, Bill Russell, Nicholas Canty, Anthony Watkinson. Social media use in the research workflow
197 -- 201Peter Barron. The library of the future: Google's vision for books
203 -- 205MacKenzie Smith. Communicating with data: new roles for scientists, publishers and librarians
207 -- 220Steve Pettifer, Philip McDermott, J. Marsh, David Thorne, Alice Villéger, Terri K. Attwood. Ceci n'est pas un hamburger: modelling and representing the scholarly article
222 -- 229Linda Bennett. Ten years of e-books: a review
231 -- 233Fay Ling. Improving peer review: increasing reviewer participation
235 -- 0Alexis Rendell-Dunn. Abstracts and Abstracting. A Genre and Set of Skills for the Twenty-first Century
236 -- 237Richard Balkwill. Access to Knowledge in Africa: The Role of Copyright
237 -- 238Charlie Rapple. The Professionals' Guide to Publishing: A Practical Introduction to Working in the Publishing Industry
238 -- 239Pippa Smart. Peer Review in Academic Promotion and Publishing: Its Meaning, Locus and Future

Volume 24, Issue 2

84 -- 85Diane Scott-Lichter. Publication ethics: prevention, screening, and treatment
87 -- 93Carol Anne Meyer. Distinguishing published scholarly content with CrossMark
95 -- 97Jufang Shao, Huiyun Shen. The outflow of academic papers from China: why is it happening and can it be stemmed?
99 -- 108Hailey Mooney. Citing data sources in the social sciences: do authors do it?
109 -- 114Chris Cradock, Paul Meehan, Paul Needham. JUSP in time: a partnership approach to developing a journal usage statistics portal
115 -- 121Laura Cox. Librarians' use of usage statistics for journals and e-books
123 -- 132Carol Tenopir, Suzie Allard, Benjamin J. Bates, Kenneth J. Levine, Donald W. King, Ben Birch, Regina Mays, Chris Caldwell. Perceived value of scholarly articles
133 -- 137Stephen C. Hubbard, Marie E. McVeigh. Casting a wide net: the Journal Impact Factor numerator
139 -- 144Alexander Kuznetsov, Irina Razumova. Selling to the BRIC - Russia: scholarly e-products and the Russian market
145 -- 154S. A. Sanni, A. N. Zainab. Evaluating the influence of a medical journal using Google Scholar
155 -- 156Louise Fuller. The craft of scientific communication
156 -- 157Angus Phillips. Scientific Publishing: From Vanity to Strategy
157 -- 158Sanford G. Thatcher. PA Guide to Going Digital
158 -- 159Martin Woodhead. Clark's Publishing Agreements: A Book of Precedents

Volume 24, Issue 1

3 -- 4Alan Singleton. Scholarly communication - can we have our name back?
5 -- 7Nikki Osborne. Reporting animal research - worthy of a rethink?
9 -- 13Charlie Rapple. Researching and implementing a new tiered pricing model
15 -- 27David Nicholas, Ian Rowlands, Peter Williams. E-journals, researchers - and the new librarians
29 -- 32James Hartley. Write when you can and submit when you are ready!
33 -- 34Shaul Shalvi, Matthijs Baas, Michel J. J. Handgraaf, Carsten K. W. De Dreu. When should we submit our papers? Reply to Hartley
35 -- 49Eefke Smit, Jeffrey Van Der Hoeven, David Giaretta. Avoiding a Digital Dark Age for data: why publishers should care about digital preservation
51 -- 53Cliff Morgan. Understanding the Creative Commons licence
55 -- 72Lawrence Souder. The ethics of scholarly peer review: a review of the literature
75 -- 76Sanford G. Thatcher. The Subversive Copy Editor: Advice from Chicago (Or, How to Negotiate Good Relationships with Your Writers, Your Colleagues, and Yourself)
76 -- 77Pippa Smart. Bookmakers: British Publishing in the Twentieth Century
77 -- 78Pippa Smart. Scholarly Communication in Library and Information Sciences: The Impact of Open Access Journals and e-Journals on a Changing Scenario