What is the better online journal format: periodical issues or open annual 
volumes?
http://wp.me/p20y83-rZ
 
The other day I received an email from Geoffrey Moore, the new editor of the 
journal Doxology: A Journal of Worship. Last year, this long-running journal 
(founded in 1984 by The Order of Saint Luke) converted from print to online, 
and from subscription-based access to open access. I'm always very interested 
in reporting on stories like this because it speaks encouragingly to increased 
awareness and momentum in favor of open access, even among established 
journals. I am preparing a profile of Doxology for an upcoming post.
 
In this post I thought it would be of interest to share my response to a 
question posed by Geoffrey. He was wondering about the best format for Doxology 
as it continues to move forward as an online open access journal. They could 
stay with the "traditional" mode of publishing discrete issues on a periodic 
basis (quarterly, bi-annually, annual, etc.), with each issue containing 
roughly the same amount of editorial, article, and review content (the print 
Doxology was published as an annual); or they could adopt an open annual volume 
format, with no fixed published quantity and new content continually added 
throughout the year as it becomes available (and passes the review process). …

Gary F. Daught
Omega Alpha | Open Access
Advocate for open access academic publishing in religion and theology
http://oaopenaccess.wordpress.com
oa.openaccess @ gmail.com | @OAopenaccess



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