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Having followed this discussion I thought it best to investigate the
policy for a specific Blackwell journal and found subtly different
wording to that in the other examples -
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/bjir_caf.pdf
"Prior to publication, the author may share with colleagues print or
electronic 'preprints' of the unpublished Article, in form and
content as accepted by Blackwell Publishing for publication in the
Journal. Such preprints may be posted as electronic files on
the author's own website for personal or professional use, or on the
author's internal university, college or corporate
networks/intranet, or secure external website at the author's
institution, but not for commercial sale or for any systematic
external distribution by a third party (e.g. a listserve or database
connected to a public access server). Prior to publication, the
author must include the following notice on the preprint. 'This is a
preprint of an Article accepted for publication in [Journal
Title] (c) [year] [copyright owner as specified in the Journal]'.
(c) After publication of the Article by Blackwell Publishing, the
preprint notice shall be amended to read as follows: 'This is an
electronic version of an Article published in [include the complete
citation information for the final version of the Article as
published in the print edition of the Journal]'. The preprint can be
replaced with the published version of the Article. Posting of
the published Article on any other electronic public server can only be
done with written permission from Blackwell Publishing."

I'm trying to figure out from this, if there was no preprint posted
whether the published version could be used as its not replacing
anything... as well as whether the description allows a repository. Are
they being deliberately vague? I'm inclined to clear this up by
contacting Blackwell, but from previous posts it sounds like I'd be none
the wiser.

Jackie

**********************************************************
Jackie Proven
Senior Information Officer 
Information Services, University of Abertay Dundee 
Tel: 01382 308867 
E-mail: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>  
  
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________________________________

From: Repositories discussion list
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Delasalle, Jenny
Sent: 17, February, 2009 10:31
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: John Wiley on RoMEO


Is it just me, or does the sample ELF quoted by Les seem to allow
repository deposit of the final version after six months? 
 
"6 months after publication you may post an electronic version of the
Article on your own personal website, on your employer's website
repository and on free public servers in your subject area."
 
This seems to be better than the previous Blackwell policy as well as
better than Wiley's policy.
 
Jen 
 

Jenny Delasalle

E-Repositories Manager

Research & Innovation Unit
University of Warwick Library
Gibbet Hill Road
Coventry CV4 7AL
United Kingdom

Tel: (+44) (0) 24 765 75793

http://go.warwick.ac.uk/repositories

 

 


________________________________

	From: Repositories discussion list
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Jane H Smith
	Sent: 17 February 2009 10:08
	To: [log in to unmask]
	Subject: Re: John Wiley on RoMEO
	
	

	Thank you for finding this information. The last communication I
had with Wiley-Blackwell, left me more confused than before I contacted
them.

	 

	On one side there appears to be a clear policy, on the other it
is down to the agreements for individual journal titles. I think this
simply as a result of the merger. We are still working on merging all
their documents/ policies into something that is easy to read, when that
is done Wiley-Blackwell will appear on RoMEO at last!

	 

	Regarding why the John Wiley entry is Green, simply when RoMEO
was set up the emphasis was on deposit of the articles online in an open
manner, I understand that there was not many repositories available at
the time, so the minimum became 'on a website'. We are in the process of
revamping RoMEO in several ways and whether to change this minimum
requirement will be discussed as part of that process.

	 

	Regards

	 

	Jane H Smith
	SHERPA Services Development Officer
	University of Nottingham
	
	Phone: 0115 951 4341
	Fax: 0115 823 0549
	
	SHERPA - www.sherpa.ac.uk
	
	  

	From: Repositories discussion list
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Leslie Carr
	Sent: 16 February 2009 17:48
	To: [log in to unmask]
	Subject: Re: John Wiley on RoMEO

	 

	I have just chased through the latest version of the
Wiley-Blackwell online authors' guidelines (on which ROMEO is based) to
find the following:

	 

	Wiley-Blackwell Publication Ethics

	http://www.wiley.com/bw/publicationethics/

	8.14 Best Practice: Protecting intellectual property
	Wiley-Blackwell is legally required to have explicit authority
to publish any article. The societies we partner with decide which
copyright arrangement they require from the options we provide, a brief
and abridged description of which is provided in the bullets below.
Wiley-Blackwell recommends the Exclusive License Form (ELF) system (for
a sample form  <http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/IJCP_ELF.pdf>
click here). For more information visit the Wiley-Blackwell Copyright
FAQs page:
<http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/bauthor/faqs_copyright.asp> click
here .

	*         The Wiley-Blackwell Exclusive License Form (ELF). This
form of copyright agreement, among other things, enables the owners of
intellectual property (be they authors or named organizations) to retain
copyright in their journal articles; Wiley-Blackwell or the journal
owner retains the commercial publishing and journal compilation rights.

	*         The Wiley-Blackwell OnlineOpen Exclusive License Form
(OOF). While allowing articles to be published and made freely available
for all to access online, this form of copyright agreement (among other
things and like the ELF) enables the owners of intellectual property (be
they authors or named organizations) to retain copyright in their
journal articles; the OOF adheres to Creative Commons 2.5 and
Wiley-Blackwell or the journal owner retains the commercial publishing
and journal compilation rights.

	*         The Copyright Assignment Form (CAF) is also still in
use.       

	 

	Note that? Recommends! Wiley-Blackwell recommends the use of the
Exclusive License form

	 

	Extract from the Sample ELF:
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/pdf/IJCP_ELF.pdf

	Prior to acceptance: We ask that as part of the publishing
process you acknowledge that the Article has been 

	submitted to the Journal. You will not prejudice acceptance if
you use the unpublished Article, in form and 

	content as submitted for publication in the Journal, in the
following ways: 

	o sharing print or electronic copies of the Article with
colleagues; 

	o posting an electronic version of the Article on your own
personal website, on your employer's 

	website/repository and on free public servers in your subject
area.  

	* After acceptance: Provided that you give appropriate
acknowledgement to the Journal and Blackwell 

	Publishing, and full bibliographic reference for the Article
when it is published, you may use the accepted version 

	of the Article as originally submitted for publication in the
Journal, and updated to include any amendments 

	made after peer review, in the following ways: 

	o you may share print or electronic copies of the Article with
colleagues; 

	o you may use all or part of the Article and abstract, without
revision or modification, in personal 

	compilations or other publications of your own work; 

	o you may use the Article within your employer's institution or
company for educational or research 

	purposes, including use in course packs; 

	o 6 months after publication you may post an electronic version
of the Article on your own personal 

	website, on your employer's website/repository and on free
public servers in your subject area. 

	Electronic versions of the accepted Article must include a link
to the published version of the Article 

	together with the following text: 'The definitive version is
available at www.blackwell-synergy.com'. 

	 

	So you *can* deposit in a repository - preprint and postprint!

	 

	HOWEVER one step away (literally) from the W-B "Best Practice
document" is the W-B "Copyright FAQ" in which they elaborate that
although the ELF is used for societies, the wholly owned journals still
retain the practice of Copyright Assignment. The sample Copyright
Assignment document (for the aptly chosen International Headache
Society) contains the following text:

	Such preprints may be posted as electronic files on the author's
own website for personal or professional use, or on the author's
internal university, college or 

	corporate networks/intranet, or secure external website at the
author's institution, but not for commercial sale or for any 

	systematic external distribution by a third party (e.g. a
listserve or database connected to a public access server).

	 

	I *think* that an institutional repository is OK by that
definition. After all, it is a secre external website at the author's
institution which is not offering the item for sale nor run by a third
party.

	----

	Les

	 

	 

	 

	 

	On 13 Feb 2009, at 13:55, Sheppard, Nick wrote:

	
	
	

	Hi

	 

	Already confused trying to steer a path through the labyrinthine
copyright policies of assorted publishers I was even more so when I put
John Wiley & Sons into RoMEO to discover that it is apparently a green
publisher that does not allow deposit in an institutional repository
(apart from JASIST authors).  Isn't this a rather unusual condition for
a 'green' publisher?

	 

	Nick Sheppard

	Repository Development Officer

	The Headingley Library

	James Graham Building

	Leeds Metropolitan University

	Beckett Park

	Leeds

	LS6 3QS

	Tel: 0113 812 4731

	email: [log in to unmask]

	blog: http://repositorynews.wordpress.com/

	 

	 

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