Caught in the Crossfire

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dc.contributor.author Harrington, John en_UK
dc.date.accessioned 2005-11-23T11:52:25Z
dc.date.available 2005-11-23T11:52:25Z
dc.date.issued 2004-05-24T13:02:09Z en_UK
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1826/130
dc.description.abstract The new ‘Open Access’ model of scholarly communication exploits both the internet and new publishing technologies to free up research literature to the benefit of authors, readers, students, libraries, funding bodies, and society as a whole. Two OA strategies could be used to move towards a fairer and more efficient communications system; self-archiving, by which scholars deposit their publications in free electronic repositories, and open access journals, which do not charge for access to the papers, but make them available to all electronically and look to other financial models to cover the costs of peer-review and publishing. The article which looks at the origins of Open Access, traces its development, and highlights the growing dilemma faced by academic authors on whether to support these new models of publication and dissemination in preference to their traditionally favoured high profile, but expensive to buy, subscription-based journals. en_UK
dc.format.extent 114176 bytes
dc.format.extent 1883 bytes
dc.format.mimetype application/msword
dc.format.mimetype text/plain
dc.language.iso en_UK en_UK
dc.subject.other Open access en_UK
dc.subject.other Scholarly communications en_UK
dc.subject.other Self-archiving en_UK
dc.subject.other Protocol for Metadata Harvesting en_UK
dc.title Caught in the Crossfire en_UK
dc.type Article en_UK


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