Sentences with phrase «for scholarly publishers»

This is no less true for scholarly publishers than it is with news brands.

Not exact matches

This could «reduce the risk to publishers of moving to an open - access business model,» says Stuart Shieber, who heads Harvard's Office for Scholarly Communication and is one of the drivers behind the initiative.
Whoever neglected to check the accuracy of the references when they were put together did nothing for Sage's standing as a scholarly publisher.
Failure to disclose substantial financial or other conflicts of interest to internal or external monitoring bodies, organisations or publishers upon preparation, submission or publication of a manuscript or a grant application, or while acting as a reviewer for scholarly journals, funding agencies, or as a member of internal and external career advancement and recruitment committees or other professional duties.
Professional and Scholarly Publishing Award, Honorable Mention in Mathematics and Statistics for Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis, Association of American Publishers, (2003)
Ravitch, curious about whether such hypersensitivity was peculiar to just this one firm, began to search for the bias and sensitivity guidelines of other test development companies, textbook publishers, state agencies, and scholarly and professional agencies.
PROSE Award, Honorable Mention, Mathematics and Statistics, Association of American Publishers, Professional and Scholarly Division, for an outstanding professional, reference, text or scholarly work for Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis: Modeling Change and Event OccurrencScholarly Division, for an outstanding professional, reference, text or scholarly work for Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis: Modeling Change and Event Occurrencscholarly work for Applied Longitudinal Data Analysis: Modeling Change and Event Occurrence, (2003)
«Darling - Hammond reveals the successful educational strategies around the world that are toppling the old educational guard, including a high degree of personalization that allows stronger, closer relationships among students, faculty, staff, and parents... Scholarly and factual, well - researched and packed with astounding examples of the current climate of American education, this text should prove highly informative for educators, educational administrators, and involved parents throughout the U.S.» — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
CN Times Books is the New York City - based U.S. subsidiary of Beijing MediaTime Book Co. LTD, a leading Chinese trade publisher that publishes more than 600 fiction and nonfiction titles per year, including books for children and titles of scholarly and academic interest.
Research Pad is a cloud powered web and mobile publishing platform for scholarly journals, targeted at publishers
The metadata librarian in question, Jeffrey Beall, has been featured in prominent journals and newspapers for his work on his site, Scholarly Open Access, which exposes publishers and journals who may be operating under false pretenses or bad business practices.
Indian publisher OMICS Publishing Group, who claims to publish around 200 scholarly journals, is suing the librarian for $ 1 billion and threatening him with criminal prosecution, which they claim under Indian law can result in up to three years in prison.
At The London Book Fair this year we launched a first pilot with another scholarly publisher, Brill, to offer Bookmetrix for their books.
For McFarland, an independent publisher of scholarly books situated in the mountains of North Carolina, Amazon's email presented a money - losing proposition.
In general we solicit participation from university presses in the U.S. and abroad and independent, not - for - profit society and scholarly publishers.
The first thing to note with Tri-Agency Policy is that it considerably abridges the author and publisher's right to restrict access, limiting it to twelve months rather fifty years after the author's death (whether the author retains the copyright or assigns it to the publisher, which is often a condition for publication in scholarly publishing).
In another common theme to the publisher letters, London Biggs, of State Government Affairs — West for Elsevier (the largest of commercial scholarly publishers), refers in her letter to «misunderstandings as to what is, and what is not, the direct result of taxpayer funding.»
To digitize collections and sell the product in ways that fail to guarantee wide access would be to repeat the mistake that was made when publishers exploited the market for scholarly journals, but on a much greater scale, for it would turn the Internet into an instrument for privatizing knowledge that belongs in the public sphere.
Publishers would be able to charge for their services in managing peer review and publishing scholarly articles, leading to a free market and fair prices for such services (rather than the huge discrepancies in journal pricing that currently exist with monopoly rights).
The scholarly publishers are suing Georgia State University for «digitizing and electronically distributing classroom materials through its electronic course reserve system and its BlackBoard - based course web software,» according to Information Today.
And what the publishers have made clear, despite this call for respecting others» needs, is their willingness to criminalize, in effect, the scholarly activities of those downloading the million papers a week to which they have no other access (or perhaps none as convenient), and those, among the 13 million people on ResearchGate, who have posted copies of their own (published) work.
After interest has been expressed in seeing this policy spread to other areas of federal research funding, such as education, it appears that Elsevier, the leading corporate publisher of scholarly journals, and other publishers have pushed for the Research Works Act to put an end to such initiatives (judging by Elsevier's campaign support for the bipartisan sponsors of the bill, as Peter Suber documents in a website devoted to the bill).
It's time for change in the industry — it's time «for legal publishers, the legal community, and representatives of the broader scholarly and professional publishing community to engage in productive dialogue and collaboration».
His book, The Redemptive Self: Stories Americans Live By, received APA's 2006 William James Award and the 2007 Association of American Publishers Award for excellence in professional and scholarly publishing.
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