At the ancients and moderns meeting on Friday, where I saw nothing on evolving metadata ecologies, I did see the History Workshop Journal, and the HW online,
Which I have had a look at this morning
And it makes me wonder the business model for the workshop, the journal, the on line, and OUP. Or is Oxford Journals another matter.
English History Review was on the same shelf, and is in the same stack, but of course a different purpose and different governance.
The value chain between journals and publishers (to use a much hackneyed expression which might not be any use) would seem to me to be going to go under a bit of a transformation, and the parallel matter for the journal, to jstor etc., how to get citation ranking games played, all makes the open access matter in the arts and humanities more interesting again. I think I recognise that SMT is a different case, as would be law for example, but the dynamics of the subject are changing again, as is I suspect library subscription policy, particularly policy oriented research for public policy?
A lis-link matter.
This email has been scanned for all viruses by the MessageLabs Email
Security System.
|