Are there open access publishing systems available that law school journal editors could employ?
Among other sources, the Association of Research Libraries Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC) lists resources for open access journal publishing. An example is the Open Journal Systems (OJS), a journal management and publishing system developed by the Public Knowledge Project. In the short history of computing, there has been no truly stable digital format for legal scholarship or anything else. For a permanent record, there still is no competitor to paper. And, I want to see my work published in a printed volume; online publication just isn’t the same. Open access journal articles can be printed out (whether informally or through a more formal print-on-demand facility) and shared in much the fashion they have been in the past — and will be much more available, at no cost, for those with any form of net access. It will also be sensible for all journals (or the libraries at their schools) to print them out as back-up, archival copies, to be kept in multiple loc
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