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Learned Publishing, Volume 10
Volume 10, Number 1, 1997
- Anthony Pearce:

ALPSP Affairs. 2 - Peter Williams:

Twenty-five years - and still centre stage. 3-6 - David Lee:

Learned Publishing: The Bell Years. 7-8 - Richard McCracken:

Rights acquisition in the electronic era. 9-13 - Hans H. Wellisch:

Indexing the continuum of verbal texts. 15-19 - Anne Dixon:

Riding the iceberg: exploiting the Internet to promote one's organisation. 21-24 - Richard Gedye

:
Using the World-Wide Web as a marketing tool. 25-32 - John St. Aubyn:

Reflections on photocopying, licensing and new technology. 33-36 - Bernard Donovan:

A tribute: John St Aubyn. 36 - Charles Oppenheim:

Moral rights and the electronic library. 37-39 - Charles Oppenheim:

Copyright on Internet. 39-41
Volume 10, Number 2, 1997
- David Pullinger:

Quality in on-line journals. 101-108 - Richard Charkin:

Scholarly communities on the World Wide Web. 109-112 - Malcolm Clarke:

Marketing to the Pacific Rim: opportunities and obstacles. 113-118 - Peter Davison:

Is anybody listening? 119-121 - Paul Harwood:

The market for journals in the pacific rim - what subscription agents are learning. 123-125 - Clive Hemingway:

Successful journal publishing on the Internet: hit or myth? 127-131 - Joel H. Baron:

Special feature: Why We Need Information Identifiers. 132-134 - Norman Paskin:

Information Identifiers. 135-156 - Dee Wood:

Project update: Electronic submission and peer review - an update on the ESPERE project. 157-160 - Charles Oppenheim:

Copyright issues. 161-164 - Andrea Powell:

Keeping Publishers Informed. 165-168 - Rosemary Roberts:

Editorial issues. 179-184
Volume 10, Number 3, 1997
- John Fowler:

ALPSP Affairs. 194-197 - Bernard Naylor:

What Librarians want: transplanting yesterday into tomorrow. 199-204 - David J. Brown:

Exorcising the spectre of interlibrary loans. 207-219 - Martin J. Richardson:

A system for the publication of biomedical journals in multiple formats. 221-225 - Keith A. Mathieson:

Steering clear of libel. 227-230 - Elspeth J. Scott:

Journey to the future. 231-235 - Jan Kuiper:

Environmental paper buying - best practice. 237-242 - Michele Benjamin:

Journal publishing - is there a future? 243-245 - Clive Semmens:

Electronic archive - a contradiction in terms? 247-248 - Mark Prinsley:

Copyright issues. 249-254 - Elizabeth Gadd

:
Copyright Clearance for the Digital Library: a practical guide. 255-259
Volume 10, Number 4, 1997
- Phil Sykes:

On-demand publishing in the Humanities: project. 305-311 - James Hartley:

Is it appropriate to use structured abstracts in social science journals? 313-317 - Penny Carter:

Site licence concept: a view of the UK Pilot Site Licence Initiative. 319-322 - Paula Kingston, Elizabeth Gadd

, Alan Poulter:
Project ACORN: user reactions. 323-330 - Albert Prior:

Normal service continues - the role of intermediaries in electronic publishing. 331-338 - Stuart Peters, Nigel Gilbert

:
The electronic alternative: Sociological Research Online. 339-343 - Tim Owen:

Official information: scholarly publishers can help the Government get it right. 345-349 - Hazel K. Bell:

Related affairs - SFEP: from isolation to professionalization affairs. 351-353 - Bob Holden:

Services to publishers - Mailing and Distribution: services to academic publishing. 355-357

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