College & Research Libraries Makes Preprints Available, but Restricts Access
The Association of College and Research Libraries' journal, College & Research Libraries, is now offering access to preprints on its site; however, access is restricted to ACRL members.
According to the C&RL Manuscript Preparation page, the typical post-review publication delay for papers is about one year.
This preprint strategy does not appear to preclude authors from depositing preprints elsewhere after publication. Below is an excerpt from the C&RL Manuscript Preparation page (emphasis added):
The agreement between ACRL and the author is license to publish. The author retains copyright and thus is free to post the article on an institutional or personal web page subsequent to publication in C&RL. All material in the journal may be photocopied for the noncommercial purpose of scientific or educational advancement.
The American Librarian Library Association's author agreement that C&RL uses states (emphasis added):
- In consideration of the Publisher’s agreement to publish the Work, Author hereby grants and assigns to Publisher the right to print, publish, reproduce, or distribute the Work throughout the world in all means of expression by any method now known or hereafter developed, including electronic format, and to market or sell the Work or any part of it as it sees fit. Author further grants Publisher the right to use Author’s name in association with the Work in published form and in advertising and promotional materials. Copyright of the Work remains in Author’s name.
- Author agrees not to publish the Work in print form prior to publication of the Work by the Publisher. [ALA requests that should you publish the Work elsewhere, you cite the publication in ALA’s Publication, by author, title, and publisher, through a tagline, author bibliography, or similar means.]
The author agreement says nothing about restricting the author's right to distribute digital preprints, yet the Manuscript Preparation page implies that the author is not free to do so prior to publication. Which is it?
If authors are free to distribute their own digital preprints, what good does it do to restrict access to preprints at the ACRL Website? This policy appears to make no sense unless ACRL believes that authors' motivation to distribute their own preprints will be undermined by ACRL making them available or unless ACRL believes that its authors simply have little or no interest in distributing their own preprints.
Perhaps the C&RL Manuscript Preparation page is just poorly worded. If so, it would be helpful if it were corrected.
But even if this is the case, it begs the question: "What is ACRL, which is actively promoting open access on many fronts, doing making C&RL's preprint service restricted?" While ACRL directly providing access to preprints at the C&RL Website is a welcome step forward, restricting access to those preprints is taking two steps back, and, although well intended, it sends the wrong message for an organization that is trying to move the open access agenda forward.
Read more about it at "C&RL Launches Preprints!"
Latest posts in ALA
- American Libraries to Go Open Access - September 24th, 2008
- Information Technology and Libraries Launches ITALica Weblog - August 8th, 2008
- New ACRL Publications Agreements FAQ - June 24th, 2008
Latest posts in Copyright
- New Zealand's New Copyright Law Will Terminate Internet Service to Repeat Infringers - October 7th, 2008
- Public Knowledge: No Orphan Works Act This Year, but Future Passage Promising - October 6th, 2008
- Content: Selected Essays on Technology, Creativity, Copyright, and the Future of the Future - October 2nd, 2008
Latest posts in E-Prints
- A Look at the Development and Future of Scholarly Communication in High Energy Physics - August 6th, 2008
- NIH Mandate Works: Article Deposits in PubMed Central Dramatically Increase - July 24th, 2008
- NISO/ALPSP Recommendations for Describing Journal Article Versions - July 9th, 2008
Latest posts in Open Access
- Reactions to AAA's Free Access after 35-Year Embargo Decision - October 7th, 2008
- Springer Will Acquire BioMed Central Group, Major Open Access Publisher - October 7th, 2008
- American Anthropologist and Anthropology News Freely Available after 35-Year Embargo Period - October 6th, 2008
Latest posts in Publishing
- Reactions to AAA's Free Access after 35-Year Embargo Decision - October 7th, 2008
- Springer Will Acquire BioMed Central Group, Major Open Access Publisher - October 7th, 2008
- American Anthropologist and Anthropology News Freely Available after 35-Year Embargo Period - October 6th, 2008
Latest posts in Scholarly Journals
- Reactions to AAA's Free Access after 35-Year Embargo Decision - October 7th, 2008
- Springer Will Acquire BioMed Central Group, Major Open Access Publisher - October 7th, 2008
- American Anthropologist and Anthropology News Freely Available after 35-Year Embargo Period - October 6th, 2008
Latest posts in Self-Archiving
- RoMEO List of Publishers Who Allow Their PDFs to Be Deposited in Institutional Repositories - August 27th, 2008
- Ireland's Higher Education Authority Enacts Open Access Mandate - August 22nd, 2008
- NIH Mandate Works: Article Deposits in PubMed Central Dramatically Increase - July 24th, 2008




























