<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div>Happy New Year to all! I'm picking up the thread begun by Sebastian Nordhoff a couple of weeks ago, concerning journal publication, ownership of copyright, ownership of journal title, etc. For some reason I can't reply to that thread so I'm starting it up again with the same subject header. (The last posting was from Martin Haspelmath, on Dec. 22.)<br><br>The ALT Executive Committee (like the E.C. of every other
professional society in our field to my knowledge) has been discussing
the status of the journal and the future of publication. Matters are
not simple: a small society (like ALT) can't be assured of having the
regular supply of qualified volunteers to handle the entire publishing
job smoothly by ourselves (this includes maintaining the subscription list, mailing, advertising, arranging publication deals to
encourage libraries to subscribe, taking in money and making payments,
etc., etc.), so we need a publisher -- that's what they're for. Keep in
mind that over the years De Gruyter Mouton has also published the
Mouton Grammar Library starting decades ago when hardly any other
publishers would do grammars, and it continues to be the
highest-prestige venue for grammar publishing (including winners of our
own grammar prizes). They have also generously donated books as prizes
for our various prize winners. They have a book exhibit at all of our
conferences, and at other major conferences they have an exhibit
prominently featuring LT, MGL grammars, and their typology series. And
they got LT going decades ago when publishing in typology was a minor
and parlous undertaking. All these things have contributed to the LT
brand, so we can't say we've created it singlehandedly.<br></div><br>In a
few days you'll all get a ballot for new officers, including a new
Editor who will have the challenging task of succeeding Frans Plank, who
is stepping down at the end of 2016 after creating LT and turning it
into an excellent journal. Other than my remarks at the Albuquerque ALT
conference last summer, we haven't made any policy decisions or
initiated discussions or polled the membership, since we'll want to have
the new Editor (and for that matter the new President and the other new
officers) involved.<br><br></div>Concerning ownership of the journal and title and copyright, the 1997 agreement we signed with De Gruyter Mouton (then Mouton de Gruyter) says nothing about these matters. ALT has never signed ownership of the journal or the title or the copyright over to anyone. We assume we own them, but we're not legal experts.<br><br></div>Johanna Nichols<br></div><br></div>