The Credibility of Electronic Publishing
Malaspina University-College (co-ord.)
University of Victoria
University of New Brunswick (Electronic Text Centre)
Université de Montréal
McMaster University (Humanities Computing Unit)
The notion of credibility as it relates to electronic scholarly publishing is of the utmost importance. For the Humanities and Social Sciences Federation of Canada, faculty at the University of Victoria, the University of New Brunswick, Université de Montréal, McMaster University, and Malaspina University-College have undertaken an exploration of the urgent issues relating to the perception -- and ultimately the use -- of electronic publication within the Canadian academic community. In its exploration of issues relating to the perception and employment of electronic publication within the Canadian academic community, this team has produced a report, at the centre of which is a series of recommendations on how to enhance the credibility of electronic and online publishing.
Links
- The Credibility of Electronic Publishing
URL: http://web.mala.bc.ca/hssfc/Final/Credibility.htm
This report will see publication, in print and electronic format, soon as a special issue of the journal Text Technology (McMaster U).Project Team
- Raymond Siemens (Malaspina University-College, Project Co-ordinator): http://purl.oclc.org/NET/R_G_Siemens.htm
- Michael Best and Elizabeth Grove-White (University of Victoria)
- Alan Burk, James Kerr, and Andy Pope (University of New Brunswick, Electronic Text Centre): http://www.lib.unb.ca/Texts/
- Jean-Claude Guédon (Université de Montréal): http://www.fas.UMontreal.ca/LITTCO/employes/GUEDONJean-Claude.html
- Geoffrey Rockwell (McMaster University, Humanities Computing Unit)
- Lynne Siemens (Malaspina University-College)
