ABSTRACT

Strategic planning, collaboration, continual stewardship, best practices, and re-engineering can provide librarians with a toolkit of innovative strategies that meets the worst of economic times with bold, persistent experimentation.

This book covers the implications for libraries of a broad range of technological and economic challenges. These challenges include the fallout from the global economic crisis, the positioning of usage statistics, the advent of open access scholarship, database management, responding to budgetary constrictions and general access to serials.

Taken as a whole, this collection provides practitioners in the library sector and in higher education with a wide variety of insights on the strengths, weaknesses, threats and opportunities involved with serials collection management in recessionary times, written by academic librarians, vendors, publishers, fundraisers, and higher education professionals.

This book was published as a special issue of The Serials Librarian.

chapter 2|12 pages

The Global Economic Crisis

What Libraries and Publishers Can Do and Are Doing

chapter 4|10 pages

A Steep Part of the Landscape

Serials, Libraries, and the Challenges Faced by Higher Education

chapter 7|21 pages

The Paper Divide

chapter 8|11 pages

A Reprise, or Round Three

Using a Database Management Program as a Decision-Support System for the Cancellation of Serials

chapter 10|9 pages

All in This Together

A Subscription Vendor's View

chapter 11|12 pages

So Poor We Can't Even Pay Attention

Identifying Important Serials for Political Science during the Great Recession

chapter 12|14 pages

Managing Resources to Maximize Serials Access

The Case of the Small Liberal Arts College Library

chapter 15|10 pages

The View from the U.K.

The Economic Crisis and Serials Acquisitions on an Offshore Island