Letters to the Editor

Fichiers

Citer ce document

Cathy McCartney et Emily Therese Heinlen, “Letters to the Editor,” Portail documentaire EnJeu[x], consulté le 21 décembre 2024, https://collections.enfance-jeunesse.fr/items/show/1436.

Métadonnées complètes

Statut du documentPublic
TitreLetters to the Editor
CréateurCathy McCartney
CréateurEmily Therese Heinlen
Date2007/03/05
DroitsAuthors submitting a paper to First Monday automatically agree to confer a limited license to First Monday if and when the manuscript is accepted for publication. This license allows First Monday to publish a manuscript in a given issue. Authors have a choice of: 1. Dedicating the article to the public domain. This allows anyone to make any use of the article at any time, including commercial use. A good way to do this is to use the Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication Web form; see http://creativecommons.org/license/publicdomain-2?lang=en . 2. Retaining some rights while allowing some use. For example, authors may decide to disallow commercial use without permission. Authors may also decide whether to allow users to make modifications (e.g. translations, adaptations) without permission. A good way to make these choices is to use a Creative Commons license. * Go to http://creativecommons.org/license/ . * Choose and select a license. * What to do next — you can then e–mail the license html code to yourself. Do this, and then forward that e–mail to First Monday’s editors. Put your name in the subject line of the e–mail with your name and article title in the e–mail. Background information about Creative Commons licenses can be found at http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/ . 3. Retaining full rights, including translation and reproduction rights. Authors may use the statement: © Author 2014 All Rights Reserved. Authors may choose to use their own wording to reserve copyright. If you choose to retain full copyright, please add your copyright statement to the end of the article. Authors submitting a paper to First Monday do so in the understanding that Internet publishing is both an opportunity and challenge. In this environment, authors and publishers do not always have the means to protect against unauthorized copying or editing of copyright–protected works.
Langueen
TypeJournal Article
AuthorCathy McCartney
AuthorEmily Therese Heinlen
Type de contenuJournal Article
ISSN13960466
Abstract NoteLettres à l'éditeur, critique sur l'étude du tourisme généaloqique en Irlande
Access Date2015-07-08 14:24:57
Date2007/03/05
Issue3
Langueen
Library Catalogfirstmonday.org
Publication TitleFirst Monday
DroitsAuthors submitting a paper to First Monday automatically agree to confer a limited license to First Monday if and when the manuscript is accepted for publication. This license allows First Monday to publish a manuscript in a given issue. Authors have a choice of: 1. Dedicating the article to the public domain. This allows anyone to make any use of the article at any time, including commercial use. A good way to do this is to use the Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication Web form; see http://creativecommons.org/license/publicdomain-2?lang=en . 2. Retaining some rights while allowing some use. For example, authors may decide to disallow commercial use without permission. Authors may also decide whether to allow users to make modifications (e.g. translations, adaptations) without permission. A good way to make these choices is to use a Creative Commons license. * Go to http://creativecommons.org/license/ . * Choose and select a license. * What to do next — you can then e–mail the license html code to yourself. Do this, and then forward that e–mail to First Monday’s editors. Put your name in the subject line of the e–mail with your name and article title in the e–mail. Background information about Creative Commons licenses can be found at http://creativecommons.org/about/licenses/ . 3. Retaining full rights, including translation and reproduction rights. Authors may use the statement: © Author 2014 All Rights Reserved. Authors may choose to use their own wording to reserve copyright. If you choose to retain full copyright, please add your copyright statement to the end of the article. Authors submitting a paper to First Monday do so in the understanding that Internet publishing is both an opportunity and challenge. In this environment, authors and publishers do not always have the means to protect against unauthorized copying or editing of copyright–protected works.
TitreLetters to the Editor
URLhttp://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/1631
Volume12
Attachment TitleSnapshot
Attachment URL[No URL]

Formats d'export