Ten years ago, most scholars and students relied on bulky card
catalogs, printed bibliographic indices, and hardcopy books and
journals. Today, much content is available electronically or
online. This book examines the history of one of the first, and
most successful, digital resources for scholarly communication,
JSTOR. Beginning as a grant-funded project of the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation at the University of Michigan, JSTOR has grown to become
a major archive of the backfiles of academic journals, and its own
nonprofit organization.
Roger Schonfeld begins this history by looking at JSTOR's
original mission of saving storage space and thereby storage costs,
a mission that expanded immediately to improving access to the
literature. What role did the University play? Could JSTOR have
been built without the active involvement of a foundation? Why was
it seen as necessary to "spin off" the project? This case study
proceeds as an organizational history of the birth and maturation
of this nonprofit, which had to emerge from the original university
partnership to carve its own identity. How did the grant project
evolve into a successful marketplace enterprise? How was JSTOR able
to serve its twofold mission of archiving its journals while also
providing access to them? What has accounted for its growth?
Finally, Schonfeld considers implications of the economic and
organizational aspects of archiving as well as the system-wide
savings that JSTOR ensures by broadly distributing costs.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!