Sci-Hub: What Is It, and Why Does It Matter to Academic Libraries? An Interview with Michael Levine-Clark and Peter Katz
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2017-10-27
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Authors
Cook, Eleanor I.
Levine-Clark, Michael
Katz, Peter
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Abstract
Piracy of subscription-based scholarly literature has reached a new peak
with the advent of Sci-Hub and other sites like it. Sci-Hub is a collection of
over 68 million items led by and compiled by a researcher from Kazakhstan.
This interview was conducted to gain insights from an academic library
director, Michael Levine-Clark, who with other colleagues is doing research
on how scholars discover and access research materials. Peter Katz, who
works for Elsevier, discusses what Sci-Hub means for him as someone
responsible for identifying and blocking activity that sets off alerts in their
usage system indicating that the activity may be being undertaken by
unauthorized users. These two individuals provide thoughtful observations
about what Sci-Hub may mean for the future of article discovery in academic
libraries and how Open Access models will impact and influence the
dynamic between pirated materials and those found behind a paywall.
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Citation
Eleanor I. Cook, Michael Levine-Clark & Peter Katz (2017) Sci-Hub: What Is It,
and Why Does It Matter to Academic Libraries? An Interview with Michael Levine-Clark and Peter
Katz, The Serials Librarian, 73:2, 79-83, DOI: 10.1080/0361526X.2017.1361886