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Knowledge Unlatched: An Argument for Academic Scholarship in Law to be Open and How it Might be Achieved

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2012

Abstract

The market in academic monographs is problematic, and sales have been in decline for decades. Concurrently, Open Access models of publishing are being developed and open content licenses designating a ‘some rights reserved’ status for content have been employed to provide a legal framework to reflect the changing ways content is used online. In the context of these innovations, Frances Pinter and Nicholas Bown describe Knowledge Unlatched, a not-for-profit library consortium project which seeks to combine a financially viable Open Access model with the use of open content licences to create a more efficient market in scholarly books to the benefit of all stakeholders in the academic publishing ecosystem.

Type
Legal Literature: Unlocking Access
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2012. Published by British and Irish Association of Law Librarians

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References

Footnotes

1 Gray, E, Bruns, K and Van Schalkwyk, F (2004). Digital publishing and open access for social science research dissemination: a case studyGoogle Scholar. Available online: www.evegray.co.za/downloads/digitalpublishing.pdf

2 Gray, E, Bruns, K and Van Schalkwyk, F, op. cit.

3 Willinsky, John. (2009) ‘Towards the Design of an Open Monograph Press’. Journal of Electronic Publishing 12(1), 2CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 Willinsky, John, op. cit. For comparable UK patterns, see Thompson, John B. (2005) Books in the Digital Age: The Transformation of Academic and Higher Education Publishing In Britain and the United States. Cambridge, Polity, 2005Google Scholar

6 Darnton, R. (1999) ‘The new age of the book’Google Scholar. New York Review of Books 18/05/99 Available online: http://www.nybooks.com/articles/546 (Accessed 19/08/08)

7 Association of Research Libraries (ARL). (2007). Graph 2, ‘Monograph and Serial Expenditures in ARL Libraries, 1986–2006.’ ARL Statistics 2005–06. Washington DC, 2007Google Scholar

8 Steele, Colin. (2008) Scholarly Monograph Publishing in the 21st Century: The Future more Than Ever Should Be an Open Book. Journal of Electronic Publishing, 11(2), 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar

10 LISU (2006). LISU Annual Library Statistics – Section 3: Academic Library Statistics

11 Prosser, David C. (2003) ‘From here to there: a proposed mechanism for transforming journals from closed to open access’. Learned publishing, 2003, 16(3), 163166CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12 Bloomsbury Academic's model: http://www.bloomsburyacademic.com/page/OurBusinessModel/our-business-model Accessed 20/06/2012

13 Lessig, Lawrence (2008) Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy. Bloomsbury Academic, London, 2008CrossRefGoogle Scholar

17 Gray, E, Bruns, K and Van Schalkwyk, F, op. cit.

18 Lessig, Lawrence, op. cit.