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E-grāmata: Handbook of Journal Publishing

  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Feb-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781107302556
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Feb-2013
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781107302556

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The Handbook of Journal Publishing is a comprehensive reference work written by experienced professionals, covering all aspects of journal publishing, both online and in print. Journals are crucial to scholarly communication, but changes in recent years in the way journals are produced, financed, and used make this an especially turbulent and challenging time for journal publishers - and for authors, readers, and librarians. The Handbook offers a thorough guide to the journal publishing process, from editing and production through marketing, sales, and fulfilment, with chapters on management, finances, metrics, copyright, and ethical issues. It provides a wealth of practical tools, including checklists, sample documents, worked examples, alternative scenarios, and extensive lists of resources, which readers can use in their day-to-day work. Between them, the authors have been involved in every aspect of journal publishing over several decades and bring to the text their experience working for a wide range of publishers in both the not-for-profit and commercial sectors.

Recenzijas

'I [ am] struck by how up to date this book feels - thanks in part to a chapter about the future of journal publishing I have no hesitation in recommending [ The] Handbook of Journal Publishing as the best single resource I know on the subject. I learnt much from reading it.' Anthony Hayes 'The advice is clearly grounded in hard-won experience and much of it benefits from being actual, attributed examples from real publishers what we have here is a hard-working, no-nonsense sort of a colleague.' Mark Ware, Learned Publishing ' a comprehensive reference guide written by four knowledgeable authors. It covers all aspects of contemporary journal publishing for both online and print titles the book provides solid information that will guide all editors through best practices in this often-overlooked part of the publishing industry Essential. Graduate students, researchers, and professionals/practitioners.' J. Rodzvilla, Choice ' a thorough, easy-to-read guide that will help readers quickly get up to speed both on important events and hot button issues in the history of journal publishing, and equip them to jump into running existing titles, or launching new projects.' Journal of Electronic Publishing

Papildus informācija

An up-to-date and comprehensive handbook written by experienced professionals, covering all aspects of journal publishing, both online and in print.
Preface and acknowledgments xi
1 Introduction to journals
1(1)
What is a journal?
2(3)
The purpose of journals
5(2)
The development of journals
7(18)
References
25(2)
Further reading
27(1)
2 Managing journals
28(1)
Introduction - what is management?
28(1)
Publishing policy
29(3)
Managing the list
32(1)
Growing the list
32(2)
Managing relationships and maintaining communications
34(1)
Managing existing journals
35(3)
Improving editorial impact
38(3)
Starting a journal
41(9)
Acquiring an existing journal
50(8)
Auditing
58(4)
Dealing with an ailing journal
62(6)
In extremis
68(1)
Pruning the list
69(3)
Training in journal publishing
72(1)
In conclusion
73(1)
References
74(1)
Further reading
74(1)
3 Editing
75(1)
Introduction
75(1)
The Editorial team
76(16)
Editorial roles within the publishing house
92(10)
References
102(1)
Further reading
103(1)
4 The production process
104(1)
Electronic submission and peer-review systems
104(4)
Print production
108(3)
Online journals
111(19)
Conclusion
130(1)
References
131(1)
Further reading
132(1)
5 Journal metrics
133(1)
Why measure journals?
133(1)
Journal citation metrics
133(13)
Journal usage metrics
146(3)
Peer-review-based journal classification systems
149(1)
The rise of nonjournal metrics
150(3)
Using citation and usage data for journal development
153(1)
References
154(2)
6 Marketing and sales
156(1)
Introduction
156(3)
Journal marketing and the "virtuous circle"
159(2)
The evolving journal marketplace
161(1)
Pricing, usage, and value
162(3)
The power of "free"
165(3)
The role of subscription agents
168(2)
Emerging markets
170(1)
What does the marketing department do?
171(21)
The sales function
192(5)
Conclusion
197(1)
References
198(1)
Further reading
198(1)
7 Fulfillment
199(1)
Introduction
199(3)
Outsource, or manage in-house?
202(2)
Subscriptions and renewals
204(2)
Gracing
206(1)
When is a subscription "new"?
207(1)
Licensing "deals"
208(1)
What do fulfillment reports measure?
209(2)
Working with subscription agents
211(2)
The customer database
213(1)
Claims
214(1)
Resolving "abuse" problems
215(1)
Individual and member subscriptions
216(2)
When journals change hands
218(1)
Conclusion
219(1)
References
219(1)
8 Journal finances
220(1)
Introduction
220(1)
Know thyself
221(3)
Basic terms
224(2)
Business models
226(6)
Profit and loss - an overview
232(13)
Working with the profit and loss statement
245(14)
Accounts for journals
259(1)
Pricing policy
259(9)
Conclusion
268(1)
References
268(1)
Further reading
269(1)
9 Subsidiary income
270(1)
Introduction
270(1)
Alternative modes of access
270(5)
Royalties, rights, and permissions
275(5)
Digital archives
280(4)
Aggregators
284(2)
Author-side payments
286(2)
Institutional memberships
288(1)
Advertising
289(1)
Sponsorship
290(2)
Grants
292(1)
Back issues
293(1)
List rentals
293(1)
Metadata
294(1)
Conclusion
295(1)
References
296(1)
Further reading
296(1)
10 Contract publishing
297(1)
Introduction
297(2)
Identifying a partner
299(1)
The RFP process
300(7)
Negotiating a contract and managing the transition
307(7)
Managing the society journal
314(1)
The renewal process
315(1)
Termination and transition
315(1)
Conclusion
316(1)
References
316(1)
Further reading
316(2)
11 Copyright and other legal aspects
318(1)
Copyright
318(11)
Contracts
329(21)
Other legal areas
350(5)
What if it all goes wrong?
355(1)
References
356(1)
Further reading
357(1)
12 Ethical issues
358(1)
How ethical issues are found
358(2)
Types of ethical issue
360(11)
Dealing with ethical issues
371(5)
References
376(3)
Further reading
379(1)
13 The future of scholarly communication
380(1)
Scholarly communication
380(1)
The drivers of change
381(7)
How change has affected journals
388(3)
... and what hasn't changed
391(2)
How change has affected scholars
393(1)
... and what hasn't changed
394(2)
The role of journal publication
396(2)
A vision of the future?
398(1)
Is there a place for publishers (and librarians)?
399(1)
References
400(2)
Further reading
402(1)
Appendix 1 Glossary
403(25)
Appendix 2 Resources
428(16)
Organizations
428(12)
Journals, magazines, newsletters, and blogs
440(2)
Websites and email lists
442(2)
Appendix 3 Vendors
444(7)
Authoring and citation management systems
444(1)
Online submission and peer-review systems
445(1)
Word to XML text conversion systems
445(1)
Hosting platforms
445(1)
Aggregators
446(1)
Abstracting and indexing services
446(1)
Subscription agents
447(1)
Sales agents
447(1)
Distribution houses
448(1)
Publishing consultants
448(1)
Document delivery suppliers
449(2)
Index 451
Sally Morris has worked in journal and book publishing for over forty years, for presses including Oxford University Press, Churchill Livingstone, and John Wiley & Sons and as CEO of the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers. She has herself edited a peer-reviewed journal: Learned Publishing. She has played a leading role in many industry and publisher/library groups and has written and lectured widely on copyright and journal publishing. Ed Barnas has worked in journal publishing for over thirty-five years. His expertise covers submission through publication, print and online, the sciences and the humanities. Ed's experience covers both not-for-profit and for-profit sectors at Cambridge University Press, Raven Press, John Wiley & Sons and the American Institute of Physics. Ed has been active in various publishing groups and served a term as President of the Society for Scholarly Publishing (SSP). Douglas LaFrenier has held a variety of advertising, marketing, and sales positions at Macmillan, McGraw-Hill, W. H. Freeman and Company, the consulting firm Robert Ubell Associates, and the American Institute of Physics. He is a former Board member of SSP, and a frequent speaker about online publishing issues at meetings of SSP, the Special Libraries Association, the Council of Engineering and Scientific Society Executives, and the Charleston Conference. Margaret Reich has been working in scholarly publishing for over twenty-five years. Most of her experience is with non-profit society publishers, including the American Physiological Society and the American Heart Association. A past President of SSP, Margaret has also served on its Board of Directors and has performed Committee service for SSP and the Council of Science Editors (CSE).