Redefining Open Access for the Legal Information Market by James Milles :: SSRN

Connotea Imports 2012-07-31

Summary:

Abstract: The open access movement in legal scholarship, inasmuch as it is driven within the law library community over concerns about the rising cost of legal information, fails to address - and in fact diverts resources from - the real problem facing law libraries today: the soaring costs of nonscholarly, commercially published, practitioner-oriented legal publications. The current system of legal scholarly publishing - in student-edited journals and without meaningful peer review - does not face the pressures to increase prices common in the science and health disciplines. One solution to this problem is for law schools to redirect some of their resources - intellectual capital, reputation, and student labor - to publishing legal information for practitioners rather than legal scholars.

Link:

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=940789

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) ยป Connotea Imports

Tags:

oa.definitions oa.law

Authors:

petersuber

Date tagged:

07/31/2012, 11:40

Date published:

04/21/2012, 09:41