Keeping up with the latest breakthroughs isn’t just expensive –
it can be exorbitant. With a one-year journal subscription costing
as much as $23,000 (for
Tetrahedron, a math periodical), the Brown libraries have started Seeing
Red, an effort to figure out which of these publications researchers
can do without. This spring, red price tags began appearing on
shelves holding journals that cost more than $1,000 a year. Librarians
have also started asking graduate students and faculty members
which journals are indispensable.
"We are spending 106 percent more on subscriptions than we did
ten years ago – for 20 percent less material," says Sam Mizer
’74 A.M., manager of the sciences serial department, who conceived
of Seeing Red. Faced with these rising costs, Mizer says, the
libraries must make choices. The hope is that faculty and students
will help them make wise ones.