Libraries, Leadership, and Scholarly Communication : Essays by Rick Anderson

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Libraries, Leadership, and Scholarly Communication : Essays by Rick Anderson

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 240 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780838914335
  • DDC分類 027.7

Full Description

A creative thinker on topics related to library collections and scholarly publishing, Rick Anderson does not back away from controversy. "Whenever we, as members of an organization like a library, are forced to choose between good things, we may start by trying to figure out some way to have both things," he writes in the preface. "But in many cases, that will turn out to be impossible and we'll have to decide which good thing is going to take priority over the other. We can't make that decision without invoking values, and the moment we start invoking values is when the conversation can take a really difficult and interesting turn." When it's time for your organization to make choices and set priorities, this collection of essays, articles, white papers, and blog posts will provide conversation starters for your strategic discussions. Anderson offers engaging, persuasive arguments on a range of timely topics, such as:

the decline of print;
patron-driven acquisitions;
Open Access (OA);
blacklisting publishers and relations with publishers' sales reps;
patron privacy;
symptoms of zealotry;
unintended consequences of the print-on-demand model; and
how to define library value

. Ideal for browsing, the ideas in this collection will kickstart your brainstorming sessions and spur your organization to confront choices head on.

Contents

Preface

Section I: Libraries and Their Collections, Now and in the Future

1: Being Essential Is Not Enough
2 : My Name Is Ozymandias, King of Kings
3: The Crisis in Research Librarianship
4: The Portal Problem: The Twin Plights of the Encyclopaedia Britannica and the Library Collection
5: On Necessity, Virtue, and Digging Holes with Hammers
6: Can, Should, and Will
7: How Sacred Are Our Patrons' Privacy Rights? Answer Carefully
8: Crazy Idea #274: Just Stop Collecting
9: Local and Global, Now and Forever: A Matrix Model of "Depth Perception" in Library Work
10: A Quiet Culture War in Research Libraries—and What It Means for Librarians, Researchers, and Publishers
11: Interrogating the American Library Association's "Core Values" Statement
12: Asserting Rights We Don't Have: Libraries and "Permission to Publish"
13: Frenemies: The Perfect and the Good, the Noisy and the Important
14: What Patron-Driven Acquisition Does and Doesn't Mean: An FAQ
15: Reference Services, Scalability, and the Starfish Problem
16: Kitten in a Beer Mug: The Myth of the Free Gift
17: You Might Be a Zealot If . . .
18: It's Not about the Workflow: Patron-Centered Practices for Twenty-First-Century Serialists
19: Can't Buy Us Love: The Declining Importance of Library Books and the Rising Importance of Special Collections
20: On Knowing the Value of Everything and the Price of Nothing
21: Preservation, Yes—but What Shall We Preserve?
22: The Struggle for Library Space

Section II Scholarly Communication and Library-Publisher Relations

23: On Advocacy, Analysis, and the Vital Importance of Knowing the Difference
24: Signal Distortion: Why the Scholarly Communication Economy Is So Weird
25: Six Mistakes Your Sales Reps Are Making—and Six That Librarians Are Making
26: Prices, Models, and Fairness: A (Partly) Imaginary Phone Conversation
27: Print-on-Demand and the Law of Unintended Consequences
28: Quality and Relevance: A Matrix Model for Thinking about Scholarly Books and Libraries
29: No Such Thing as a Bad Book? Rethinking "Quality" in the Research Library
30: No, You May Not Come Train My Staff
31: On the Likelihood of Academia "Taking Back" Scholarly Publishing
32: Is a Rational Discussion of Open Access Possible?
33: CC BY, Copyright, and Stolen Advocacy
34: Open-Access Rhetoric, Economics, and the Definition of "Research"
35: CC BY and Its Discontents: A Growing Problem for Open Access
36: Deceptive Publishing: Why We Need a Blacklist, and Some Suggestions on How to Do It Right
37: The NPR Model and the Financing of Scholarly Communication

Index.

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