Journal: Learned Publishing

Volume 28, Issue 4

236 -- 238Judy Luther. Editorial: Recognizing roles and contributions
239 -- 250Ladislava Zbiejczuk Suchá, Jela Steinerová. Journal publishing models in the Czech Republic
251 -- 260Nahid Bayat Bodaghi, S. A. Sanni, A. N. Zainab. In competition with ISI: the perceptions of chief editors of Malaysian local journals
261 -- 273Truyken L. B. Ossenblok, Raf Guns, Mike Thelwall. Book editors in the social sciences and humanities: an analysis of publication and collaboration patterns of established researchers in Flanders
274 -- 282Rob Johnson, Mattia Fosci. On shifting sands: assessing the financial sustainability of UK learned societies
283 -- 291Elke Bartholomäus, Sandy Goldbeck-Wood, Meike Sewering, Christopher Baethge. Experiences with bilingual publishing: surveys of authors and editors
292 -- 298Tim Lloyd. Access management: the overlooked but critical enabler
299 -- 303Peggy Glahn. Reveal Digital: an open access model empowering libraries to become publishers
304 -- 308David Payne. BMJ online: lessons from a 20-year digital presence
309 -- 316Laura Dorival Paglione, Rebecca Naomi Lawrence. Data exchange standards to support and acknowledge peer-review activity
317 -- 320Owen Priestley. User experience methodology: from the physical to the emotional
321 -- 325Joachim Schöpfel. Open access - the rise and fall of a community-driven model of scientific communication
326 -- 0Guillaume Cabanac. On the dead link issue in academic papers
327 -- 0David Nicholas, Eti Herman, Hamid Jamali, Blanca Rodríguez Bravo, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Tom Dobrowolski, Stéphanie Pouchot. New ways of building, showcasing, and measuring scholarly reputation

Volume 28, Issue 3

163 -- 165Pippa Smart. Twenty-five shades of grey
167 -- 168Pippa Smart. Learned Publishing: new editorial team
169 -- 183David Nicholas, Eti Herman, Hamid R. Jamali, Blanca Rodríguez Bravo, Cherifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Tom Dobrowolski, Stéphanie Pouchot. New ways of building, showcasing, and measuring scholarly reputation
184 -- 194Mark Carden. Academic publishing career paths - initial research and observations
195 -- 204Ali Gazni. Globalization of national journals: investigating the growth of international authorship
205 -- 214Francis Dodds. Understanding end-users in academic book publishing
216 -- 222W. U. Yang, Qiang Zou. The ethical issues in instructions for authors of Chinese biomedical journals
225 -- 227Kevin L. Smith. Figuring on fair use
229 -- 231Lynette Owen. Fair dealing: a concept in UK copyright law

Volume 28, Issue 2

82 -- 83Judy Luther. The evolving landscape
85 -- 91Bo-Christer Björk, Turid Hedlund. Emerging new methods of peer review in scholarly journals
93 -- 105Carol Tenopir, Donald W. King, Lisa Christian, Rachel Volentine. Scholarly article seeking, reading, and use: a continuing evolution from print to electronic in the sciences and social sciences
106 -- 113Graham Stone. The benefits of resource discovery for publishers: a librarian's view
114 -- 122Williams Ezinwa Nwagwu. Counterpoints about predatory open access and knowledge publishing in Africa
123 -- 131Alison Baverstock, Robert Blackburn, Marfuga Iskandarova. How the role of the independent editor is changing in relation to traditional and self-publishing
132 -- 139Shuang-Shuang Gai, Xue-Li Liu, Shi-Le Zhang, Rui-Yuan Liu. The citation evolution law of papers published in the same year but different month
140 -- 142Angela Mills Wade. European Publishers Council: making copyright work on the Web
143 -- 145Margaret Winker. The promise of post-publication peer review: how do we get there from here?
147 -- 149Benjamin Mudrak. JournalGuide: bringing authors and journals together
151 -- 155Amy Brand, Liz Allen, Micah Altman, Marjorie M. K. Hlava, Jo Scott. Beyond authorship: attribution, contribution, collaboration, and credit
156 -- 157Anthony Watkinson. 2nd edn
156 -- 0Anthony Watkinson. Publishing and the Advancement of Science: From Selfish Genes to Galileo's Finger
157 -- 158Sue Mattingley. 7th edn

Volume 28, Issue 1

3 -- 0Pippa Smart. Editorial: 350 years and how are we doing?
4 -- 8Kate Lara. The library's role in the management and funding of open access publishing
9 -- 13Stuart Lawson. 'Total cost of ownership' of scholarly communication: managing subscription and APC payments together
15 -- 21David Nicholas, Anthony Watkinson, Hamid R. Jamali, Eti Herman, Carol Tenopir, Rachel Volentine, Suzie Allard, Kenneth J. Levine. Peer review: still king in the digital age
23 -- 34Williams Ezinwa Nwagwu, Obinna Ojemeni. Penetration of Nigerian predatory biomedical open access journals 2007-2012: a bibiliometric study
35 -- 42Francis Dodds. Changes in the role of the commissioning editor in academic book publishing
43 -- 53Alison Baverstock, Robert Blackburn, Marfuga Iskandarova. Who are the independent editors, how did they reach their role and what are their associated job satisfactions?
55 -- 57Andrea Powell, Michael Pearson. The reports of our death have been greatly exaggerated (with apologies to Mark Twain)
59 -- 62Tom Hill. Identifying legitimate open access journals: some suggestions from a publisher
64 -- 68Casey Busher, Irene Kamotsky. Stories and statistics from library-led publishing
69 -- 74Jingfeng Xia. Predatory journals and their article publishing charges
75 -- 79James Phillpotts, Tim Devenport, Alison Mitchell. Evolution of the Transfer Code of Practice