The National Electronic Site Licence Initiative (NESLI) is an attempt to hasten the replacement of printed journals with their electronic equivalents in UK higher education. Effectively a national consortium – NESLI – aims to achieve attractive pricing models for electronic content. However, there is also a strong desire to ensure the interoperability of the various electronic services available to the academic and research community. As such, NESLI is part of the Joint Information Systems Committee’s (JISC) Distributed National Electronic Resource (DNER). This paper discusses the background to the initiative, its aims and objectives, the role of the Managing Agent and what has been achieved to date, as well as the plans for the immediate future. It goes on to consider the possible implications for the world outside of UK higher education, the lessons learned so far, and the viability of the NESLI model.
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1 February 2000
Case Report|
February 01 2000
NESLI: a successful national consortium Available to Purchase
Robert Bley
Robert Bley
Swets Blackwell, and the NESLI Managing Agent, Abingdon, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1466-2760
Print ISSN: 1466-2752
© MCB UP Limited
2000
Library Consortium Management: An International Journal (2000) 2 (1): 18–28.
Citation
Bley R (2000), "NESLI: a successful national consortium". Library Consortium Management: An International Journal, Vol. 2 No. 1 pp. 18–28, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/14662760010326132
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