ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1993, addresses important questions about the future that libraries need to answer today such as: What will change for serials librarians, vendors, and publishers as ink and paper become the oddity and electronic transmitters and receivers become the norm? What services will be in demand and who will provide them? Which economic models will keep them afloat? Most importantly, can the disparate groups currently active in scholarly communication work together to build the physical, social, and economic backbone of a new model?

This book is an invaluable guide to the future of serials librarianship. It describes new technologies, predicts how the publishing industry will develop in the near future, and explores how the library may evolve within a new system of scholarly communication. Just a few of the exciting topics covered include the development of standards for networking technologies; the shift from ownership to access in libraries as a result of electronic information; the history of scholarly communication; copyright of electronic data; higher education in the 1990s; and marketing in libraries.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part |1 pages

Joint Plenary Session, NASIG and SSP (Society For Scholarly Publishing), June 20, 1992

part |1 pages

Plenary Session II: June 21,1992

part |1 pages

Breakout Session A: New Strategies for Publishing

part |2 pages

Breakout Session B: Price Studies: Why and How

part |1 pages

Breakout Session C: Copyright and Licensing in the Electronic Environment

part |8 pages

Breakout Session D: Preservation: Future Strategies for Retaining the Past

chapter |8 pages

New Books from Old: A Proposal

part |4 pages

Breakout Session E: Regional Library Networking: New Opportunities for Serving Scholarship

part |1 pages

Breakout Session F: Z39.1-You Just Don’t Understand! Librarians and a Publisher Discuss the Standard for Periodicals Format and Arrangement

part |1 pages

Breakout Session G: Marketing to Libraries: What Works?

part |1 pages

Breakout Session H: Article Delivery: An Alternative to Ownership?

part |1 pages

Workshop Session Reports