Patterns of Authorship in Library Journals By Academic Librarians
Document Type
Article
Date of Original Version
2-28-1985
Abstract
Will current pressure for faculty members to publish in order to achieve promotion and tenure affect authorship patterns in the library literature? A survey of articles in twelve library journals between 1973 and 1982 showed a steady increase in the percentage written by academic librarians. The range here was from 28 to 42 percent. The yearly distribution in each of the journals was documented for academic librarian authors and for the size of the library they represented. The productivity of these authors ranged from one to fourteen articles each. Seventy-eight percent of the librarians published only one article in this sample. The sample size of 357 libraries was divided into five classes ranging from smallest, with holdings of less than 100,000 volumes, to largest, with holdings of one million and more volumes. As might be expected, more authors came from the larger libraries and indications are that academic authors will continue to increase their share of authorship in general library journals. © 1985 by The Haworth Press, Inc. All rights reserved.
Publication Title, e.g., Journal
Serials Librarian
Volume
9
Issue
3
Citation/Publisher Attribution
Krausse, Sylvia C., and Janice F. Sieburth. "Patterns of Authorship in Library Journals By Academic Librarians." Serials Librarian 9, 3 (1985). doi: 10.1300/J123v09n03_12.