Elsevier

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Elsevier, the world's largest publisher of medical and scientific literature, forms part of the Reed Elsevier group. Based in Amsterdam, the company has substantial operations in the UK, USA and elsewhere. It has encountered a great deal of criticism in academic circles for its high pricing of journals and electronic resources, far above the average in their fields.

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Elsevier took its name (in modernised form) from the historic Dutch publishing house of the same name (see House of Elzevir). The Elzevir family had operated as booksellers and publishers in the Netherlands. Its founder, Lodewijk Elzevir, (1542–1617) lived in Leiden and established the business in 1580.

As publishers of new work by Descartes, Galileo, and Grotius, they account for part of the reason for Bertrand Russell's comment that it "is impossible to exaggerate the importance of Holland in the seventeenth century, as the one country where there was freedom of speculation". [1]

The modern company was founded in 1880. Leading products include journals such as The Lancet, Cell and Tetrahedron Letters, books such as Gray's Anatomy, and the ScienceDirect collection of electronic journals. Others include the Trends series, and the Current Opinion series.

Elsevier may be the world’s largest provider of science and health information. It publishes about 250'000 articles per year in 2000 journals[2]. Its archives contain 7 million past publications. Total yearly downloads amount to 240 million.[3]

Elsevier is part of the Reed Elsevier group. In terms of revenue, it accounts for 28% of the total (₤1.5b of 5.4 billions in 2006). In terms of operating profits, it represents a much bigger fraction of 44% (₤395 of 880 millions)[4]. Adjusted operating profits have risen by 10% between 2005 and 2006 [5]

Reed Elsevier Annual Report 2006
Turnover € 7'935 million (+5% from '05)
Pre-tax profit € 1'060 million (+3% from '05)
Elsevier Annual Report 2006
Turnover € 2'236 million (+6.6% from '05)
Pre-tax profit € 581 million (+0.5% from '05)
see Elsevier reports[6]; turnover = revenue; profits not adjusted

7,000 journal editors, 70,000 editorial board members and 200,000 reviewers are working for Elsevier.[2] Each year, the company publishes the original work of more than 500,000 authors in 2,000 journals, 17,000 books, 18 new journals and 1,900 new books.[2]

It is headed by Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Erik Engstrom.[7]

With its headquarters based in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Elsevier employs more than 7,000 people in over 70 offices across 24 countries.[2]

Elsevier has two distinct operating divisions: Science & Technology and Health Sciences. Products and services of both include electronic and print versions of journals, textbooks and reference works and cover the health, life, physical and social sciences.

Herman van Campenhout is the CEO.

The target markets are academic and government research institutions, corporate research labs, booksellers, librarians, scientific researchers, authors, and editors.

Flagship products & services include: ScienceDirect, Scopus, Scirus, EMBASE, Engineering Village, Compendex, MDL Isentris, Cell, and The Lancet.

There are the following subsidiary imprints, many of them previously independent publishing companies: Academic Press, Architectural Press, Butterworth-Heinemann, CMP, Digital Press, Elsevier, Focal Press, Gulf Professional Publishing, Morgan Kaufmann, Newnes, Pergamon, Pergamon Flexible Learning, Syngress Publishing.

Brian Nairn is the CEO.

The target market is physicians, nurses, allied health professionals, medical and nursing students and schools, medical researchers, pharmaceutical companies, hospitals, and research establishments. Publishing in 12 languages including English, German, French Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Polish, Japanese and Chinese.

Flagship publications include: The 'Consult' series (FirstCONSULT, PathCONSULT, NursingCONSULT, MDConsult, StudentCONSULT), Virtual Clinical Excursions, and major reference works such as Gray's Anatomy, Nelson' Pediatrics, Dorland's IIlustrated Medical Dictionary, Netter's Atlas of Human Anatomy, and online versions of many journals[8] including The Lancet, FEBS Letters, etc.

There are the following subsidiary imprints, previously independent publishing companies: Saunders, Mosby, Churchill Livingstone, Butterworth-Heinemann, Hanley & Belfus

In recent years the subscription rates charged by the company for its journals have been criticised; some very large journals (those with more than 5000 articles) charge subscription prices as high as $14,000, far above average. The company has been criticised not just by advocates of a switch to the so-called open-access publication model, but also by universities whose library budgets make it difficult for them to afford current journal prices. For example, a resolution by Stanford University's senate singled out Elsevier as an example of a publisher of journals which might be "disproportionately expensive compared to their educational and research value" and which librarians should consider dropping, and encouraged its faculty "not to contribute articles or editorial or review efforts to publishers and journals that engage in exploitive or exorbitant pricing".[9] Similar guidelines and criticism of Elsevier's pricing policies have been passed by the University of California, Harvard University and Duke University.[10]

In November 1999 the complete Editorial Board of the Journal of Logic Programming (50 editors in total) collectively resigned after 16 months of unsuccessful negotiations with Elsevier Press about the price of library subscriptions. This editorial board created a new journal (Theory and Practice of Logic Programming) with a lower priced publisher, and on its side Elsevier continued the publication of the journal with a completely different editorial board and a slightly different name (The Journal of Logic and Algebraic Programming).

At the end of 2003, the entire editorial board of the prestigious Journal of Algorithms resigned to start Transactions on Algorithms with a different, lower priced publisher.[11][12]

The same happened in 2005 to the International Journal of Solids and Structures whose editors resigned to start the Journal of Mechanics of Materials and Structures. However, a new editorial board was quickly established and the journal continues in unaltered form.

On August 10, 2006, the entire editorial board of the distinguished mathematical journal Topology handed in their resignation, again because of stalled negotiations with Elsevier to lower the subscription price.[13] This board has now launched the new Journal of Topology at a far lower price, under the auspices of the London Mathematical Society.[14]

The French École Normale Supérieure has stopped having Elsevier publish the prestigious journal Annales Scientifiques de l'École Normale Supérieure[15] (as of 2008[16]).

In the March 2007 issue of the medical journal The Lancet, leading medical centers including the UK Royal College of Physicians urged Reed Elsevier to sever weapons ties. Doctors spoke out against Reed's role in the involvement of the organizing of exhibitions for the arms trade. [17] Reed Elsevier’s chief executive responded in June 2007 with a written statement which was welcomed by authors of the petition [18]. Reed Elsevier announced that it will stop participating in arms exhibitions[19][20].

Imprints are brand names in publishing. Elsevier uses its imprints to market to different consumer segments. Many of them have previously been the company names of publishers that were purchased by Reed Elsevier.

  1. ^ http://www.randomhouse.com/features/island/excerpt.html
  2. ^ a b c d Elsevier at a glance
  3. ^ http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/intro.cws_home/glance_1 (accessed 19 October 2007)
  4. ^ http://www.investis.com/reports/reed_ar_2006_en/report.php?type=0&page=98
  5. ^ http://www.investis.com/reports/reed_ar_2006_en/report.php?type=0&page=17
  6. ^ http://www.investis.com/reports/reed_ar_2006_en/report.php?type=0&page=98
  7. ^ http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/intro.cws_home/management_profiles
  8. ^ [1]
  9. ^ Faculty Senate minutes February 19 meeting Stanford Report, Feb. 25, 2004
  10. ^ Fac Sen addresses costly journals The Stanford Daily, February 20, 2004
  11. ^ http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/joalet.pdf
  12. ^ http://www.cs.colorado.edu/~hal/s.pdf
  13. ^ http://www.math.ku.dk/topology/topology.resignation.letter.pdf
  14. ^ http://www.lms.ac.uk/publications/jtop.html
  15. ^ John Baez: What We Can Do About Science Journals August 13, 2007
  16. ^ http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/600714/description
  17. ^ http://www.the-scientist.com/news/home/53073/
  18. ^ http://chronicle.com/news/article/2434/journal-publishing-giant-will-halt-lucrative-business-in-weapons-bazaars
  19. ^ http://idiolect.org.uk/notes/?cat=15
  20. ^ http://www.reed-elsevier.com/index.cfm?articleid=2084

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