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Archiving
One of the traditional benefits of publishing in paper journals
is that the physical copies that are bought by libraries serve, at least in
principle, as a permanent record of an author's work. A major concern
about electronic publication is whether or not it is possible for the Internet
to serve a similar archival function. The web is extremely dynamic. Site
appear and disappear all the time. It would be a great loss both to
contributing authors and the profession at large if content of the Economics
Bulletin were to become unavailable in the future. We take this
concern very seriously and have taken the following concrete steps to make the Economics
Bulletin credible as an archive for research.
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First, and most important, we have secured a guarantee
from the library of the University of Illinois that they will continue to
make the content of the Economics Bulletin publicly available on its
web servers in the unfortunate event that the Bulletin ceases publication.
Of course we have no intention of ever ceasing publication, but if the
unexpected happens, authors can be secure in the knowledge that the third
largest university in the North America will make sure that everything they have
published in the Bulletin will continue to be accessible for the indefinite
future. A formal statement of this guarantee may be seen at the bottom
of this page.
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Second, we have structured our database so that published
papers will always be available at the URL's under which they were
originally published. You will safely be able to refer colleagues to
your work and even create links in CV's and online reading lists to papers
published in the Economics Bulletin at fixed, stable URL's.
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Third, given that the permanence and stability of work
published in the Economics Bulletin are not in question, the web
offers significant advantages over physical journals as a means of
archiving research. The effort involved in retrieving an article
from a paper journal stored somewhere in one's local library are far from
trivial. This becomes even more significant if one's library does not
happen to subscribe to the journal in question and an interlibrary loan is
required. In many cases, potentially relevant literature is probably
ignored because it is simply too much trouble to dig it up. In contrast,
having an article immediately available over the web, and being able to
quickly search for and access other related work makes it much more likely
that future researchers will take the time to read, refer to, and perhaps
even learn from, previously published work.
Statement from the University Librarian
of the
University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana
The University of Illinois Library strongly backs the objectives
of the Economics Bulletin. To support this effort and to help give authors
confidence in the permanence of papers published in electronic journals, the
University of Illinois Library offers the following guarantee:
Should the Economics Bulletin ever cease publication, The
University Library of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign commits itself to continue to make its archived
issues publicly available over the Internet.
Paula Kaufman
October 2000
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