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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Library and Information Science

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Winthrop University

Open Access

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Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Collaboration Is The New Black, Mark Y. Herring Jul 2014

Collaboration Is The New Black, Mark Y. Herring

Dacus Library Faculty Publications

Orange may be the new black, but as I have seen only five minutes of that show, I can’t really use it here. Besides, based on the five minutes I saw, I would assume it is a series written by males. Not since the Victoria’s Secret catalog have I seen so many women wearing fewer clothes, or engaging in so many unmentionable acts. I’ll stop there because my Victorianism is showing, I’m sure.


Can Open Access Save Us?, Mark Y. Herring Dec 2010

Can Open Access Save Us?, Mark Y. Herring

Dacus Library Faculty Publications

Just about every time I open a journal or read a blog online, I see something about e-books saving newspapers and magazines. Both magazines and newspapers–and really all scholalry communication–are going the way of all flesh, we’re told, but e-book reading may provide a stay of execution, however short that may be. It got me to thinking if there might be something else that would provide a similarDies Irae proroguement for scholarly communication in general. That’s when it occurred to me it could well be open access (OA), or at least as I envision it here.


Irs Rx For Libs? Possibly, Mark Y. Herring Apr 2008

Irs Rx For Libs? Possibly, Mark Y. Herring

Dacus Library Faculty Publications

Open access, or the idea anyway, came to life nearly a decade and a half ago. Now almost fifteen years later, we’re still talking about it, still paying exorbitant amounts for periodicals, or their still relatively new counterparts, electronic aggregate databases. Experts tell me that fifteen years is not enough time for a good idea to catch on. I guess that’s the way it is with Murphy’s Law: bad ideas catch on instantly while good ideas come and go, most never seeing the light of day.