I followed Heather's link...perhaps there's another somewhere else Heather's  
is from Taylor and Francis Regional director for Australia Sarah 
Blatchford...She cites policy  LIS Author Rights Policy, at the following 
link:http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/preparation/lisrights.asp
about the same language is avaialble at:
http://journalauthors.tandf.co.uk/permissions/reusingOwnWork.asp
which is about more than LIS journals.


Going there I read the following( at either link)
In assigning Taylor & Francis an exclusive license to publish, you retain:...
the right to post your revised text version of the "postprint" of the article 
(i.e., the article in the form accepted for publication in a Taylor & Francis 
journal following the process of peer review), as an electronic file on your 
own website for personal or professional use, or on your institution's network 
or intranet or website, or in a subject repository that does not offer content 
for commercial sale or for any systematic external distribution by a third 
party, provided that you do not use the PDF version of the article prepared by 
us and you include any amendments or deletions or warnings relating to the 
article issued or published by Taylor & Francis and only with the following 
acknowledgment or such other acknowledgment as Taylor & Francis may notify to 
you:  (see link for acknowledgement text required)

The LIS version was  posted apparently in November of 2011.

 this policy does not appear to be restricted to LIS journals as it says:
:
We are happy to extend all these provisions to the many thousands of authors 
who have signed copyright assignments and licenses to publish in the past with 
Taylor & Francis or one of its constituent imprints, without the need to seek 
amendment to the previous agreements.

this does not appear to be a new policy created as a reaction to the 
resignations.

Chuck Hamaker

PS
I thought Informa was separate from T&F. 
________________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of Heather 
Morrison [[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2013 3:32 PM
To: Global Open Access List (Successor of AmSci)
Subject: [GOAL] Informa.plc - Taylor and Francis no-embargo for LIS journals

In response to a post on the mass resignation of the Journal of Library 
Administration, Informa.plc, the multinational conglomerate working under its 
scholar-friendly-sounding brand "Taylor & Francis", posted this note about 
self-archiving:

"Under our LIS pilot program, authors can freely post their (“post-print”) 
manuscript immediately on publication – ie without any embargo."

from:
https://theconversation.com/journal-editorial-board-quits-over-open-access-principle-13086

Is there a connection? If other disciplines wish to remove embargoes to 
self-archiving, should they convince one of their journals to resign, too?

best,

Heather G. Morrison
The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com
_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal

_______________________________________________
GOAL mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.ecs.soton.ac.uk/mailman/listinfo/goal

Reply via email to