| The
UNH Library: Meeting the demands of the University Community in
a changing environment
By Claudia Morner,
University Librarian
Supporting the three-fold mission of teaching, research and public
service has been an ongoing challenge for universities. Recent changes
in academic publishing and scholarly communication have exacerbated
the problem. The Association of Research Libraries reports the following
statistics:
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Journals have gone up in price an average of 9 percent a year
since 1986, while the consumer price index has increased only
3.3 percent a year.
-
Libraries spent 170 percent more to purchase 6 percent fewer journal
titles in 1999 than in 1986.
-
Commercial journal publishers are expanding their market control
through acquisitions, mergers, and the purchase of individual
titles from learned scholarly societies. (Association of Research
Libraries, http://www.arl.org/create/change.html)
Other
academic libraries have been trimming their journal holdings annually
for the past several years. The Cornell University Library, for
instance, has focused its efforts on simultaneously reviewing its
titles from the publisher Elsevier and educating faculty about their
role in the scholarly communication process:
http://www.library.cornell.edu/scholarlycomm/problem.html.
Dartmouth Biomedical Libraries, in reviewing budget costs, moved
to educate their community about journal cancellations because they
cannot afford to continue to receive the same titles in two formats,
print and electronic: http://www.dartmouth.edu/~biomed/resources.htmld/cancel04.shtml
Likewise, libraries are not only examining titles in the sciences,
but are canceling the print copies of journals that are also available
in ProjectMuse, as at the University of Notre Dame:
http://www.library.nd.edu/colldev/library_budget_cuts/
journal_cancellation_list.shtml
At the University of New Hampshire, we are seeking to balance and
control the materials budget by implementing all of the above. We
are reviewing the collection and materials budget to ensure that
they support and reflect the University’s academic efforts
by examining the journals by subject and usage data. We are also
examining the use of the titles that we receive from publishers
like Elsevier. In addition, for FY05, we will be recommending the
cancellation of all of the print titles in Project Muse and most
of the titles in BioOne, because these platforms provide reliable
access to the journal titles in their databases.
We will continue to improve electronic access through interlibrary
loan and document delivery. In addition, the UNH Library introduced
a new document delivery service, Infotrieve http://www.library.unh.edu/tools/faq.shtm. |