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    1. Can we "fix" open access? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      But we are navigating a transition right now.  “Back in the day” there were still predatory publishing practices, such as huge price (...)

    2. Scholarly Communications @ Duke - Page 52 of 58 - Discussions about the changing world of scholarly

      The Computer & Communications Industry Association, which has recently grabbed some headlines with its complaint to the Federal Communications (...)

    3. Saying the right things, then doing them - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      To this reaction she replies,  Closing our work away from non-scholarly readers, and keeping our conversations private, might protect us from (...)

    4. Moving beyond the photo album - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Nevertheless, the promotion and tenure system still relies, for the time being, on these journals, which presumably cannot survive if libraries (...)

    5. It seems simple, really - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      So creative industries seeking to grow in the digital economy need to do more than try, futilely, to eradicate piracy, they need to (...)

    6. What I learned getting published by Taylor & Francis. - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Daught says: April 23, 2013 at 1:49 pm Kevin, your comment “that authors choose journals, not publishers” is astute, and a fact that can obscure (...)

    7. What does PRO-IP really do? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Blogger Man says: October 23, 2008 at 5:14 pm This is truly a sense of shame for us a country. We as an economy are losing billions of (...)

    8. ALERTS! - Duke University Libraries Blogs

      The following topics are most prominently featured: + Regional identities in globalized societies + Communication and transmission of (...)

    9. https://sites.fuqua.duke.edu/fordlibrary/page/52/

      Today’s changing world economy, however, reflects a growing need for more effective leaders and entrepreneurs.

    10. More than meets the eye - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The radical distinction between the “gift economy” in which individual scholars work, giving away their most precious intellectual (...)

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