***Cross-posted to multiple lists; please excuse duplication.***

publish! with ALCTS

ALCTS Publications


Library Resources & Technical Services (LRTS)
ALCTS's peer-reviewed quarterly online journal takes a critical approach to questions and challenges facing technical services professionals and reviews professional publications.

LRTS is the official journal of the Association for Library Collections and Technical Services. Regarded as one of the top technical services journals1, LRTS publishes research and “Notes on Operations” papers that have undergone double-blind peer-review. The LRTS Editorial Board is composed of a panel of experts who represent the various ALCTS sections, which include these subject areas and topics:

- Acquisitions, including licensing and economic aspects of acquisitions
- Cataloging and metadata, including MARC and non-MARC metadata, RDA, authority control, subject analysis, classification
- Continuing resources, including cataloging and management
- Collection development
- Preservation, including digitization
- Scholarly communications
- Training and education of technical services librarians and personnel, including continuing education

Have you given a presentation? Consider taking it one step farther by developing it into a research paper; LRTS editors and staff can guide you through this transition. Have you implemented an innovative process or resolved a thorny problem that other libraries are facing? It may be a good candidate for a “Notes on Operations” paper. New to publishing? Get started by writing a book review for LRTS!

Prospective authors interested in writing a piece for LRTS should:

- Visit the LRTS website at http://alcts.metapress.com to read past issues
- Read the resources for
LRTS authors linked at http://www.ala.org/alcts/resources/lrts and the Proposal Guidelines for ALCTS Publications (http://www.ala.org/alcts/resources/info/proposal-guide) and suggested topics list, and
- C
ontact the LRTS Editor at lrtseditor@ala.org.

We look forward to hearing from you!

1Judith M. Nixon, “Core Journals in Library and Information Science: Developing a Methodology for Ranking LIS Journals,” College & Research Libraries 75, no. 1: 66-90.


Association for Library Collections & Technical Services
a division of the American Library Association
www.ala.org/alcts




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