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Punctum Books Library Program Welcomes University of Pennsylvania

Published onMay 18, 2020
Punctum Books Library Program Welcomes University of Pennsylvania

Punctum Books is thrilled to announce that University of Pennsylvania Libraries is now a member of our Supporting Library Membership Program. University of Pennsylvania plays a critical role in developing open access initiatives for scholarship both at their institution and globally. Punctum would like to extend special gratitude to Jeanne Shuttleworth, Director Acquisitions, Access and Licensing, for building this partnership, as well as Nick Okrent, Coordinator and Librarian for Humanities Collections, for joining our Library Advisory Board.

Our Supporting Library Membership Program was initiated with metadata management, scholarly communications, and collection management librarians at UCSB Library and OAPEN. When libraries support punctum, they not only receive specific things that are meaningful to them (such as MARC & ONIX records, usage stats, etc.) but they are also helping to support the operations of a press that shares values with the library community. See the current list Supporting Library Members.

Our hope at punctum is to work directly with librarians in order to ensure that our catalog is fully integrated into universal research systems, including repositories, while ensuring our books are available to a global readership without economic or other barriers. In supporting punctum, libraries invest in a more diverse, scholar-led, community-owned, and non-profit publishing ecosystem that we believe is crucial for the cultivation of more creative modes of scholarship and their open dissemination and preservation as public knowledge. Libraries can be assured that they are investing in a press that works toward new modes of economic and operational sustainability while collaborating with other presses and organizations such as ScholarLed and Invest In Open to help build open infrastructure for open access books.

Punctum’s Library Program adopts a collective funding model, inspired by Open Library of the Humanities, whereby small annual contributions from libraries form a robust revenue pool that enables a cost-effective method for funding open access — we are stronger together. With consortial library funding for OA books, no single institution bears a disproportionate cost and each institution decides for itself what is an appropriate level of support.

We are immensely grateful for the support of University of Pennsylvania Libraries and look forward to working alongside them in enacting meaningful change to not only the way in which scholarship is accessed and utilized, but also supported and generated.

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