JSTOR
is a not-for-profit organization with a dual
mission to create and maintain a trusted
archive of important scholarly journals,
and to provide access to these journals as
widely as possible. JSTOR offers researchers
the ability to retrieve high-resolution,
scanned images of journal issues and pages
as they were originally designed, printed,
and illustrated. The journals archived in
JSTOR span many disciplines. For more information
about the JSTOR collections, please visit JSTOR website.
Originally conceived as a project at The
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, JSTOR began
as an effort to ease the increasing problems
faced by libraries seeking to provide adequate
shelf space for the long runs of backfiles
of scholarly journals. JSTOR is not a current
issues database. Because of JSTOR's archival
mission, there is a gap, typically from 1
to 5 years, between the most recently published
journal issue and the back issues available
in JSTOR (see JSTOR:
The Moving Wall for more information).
We are pleased to provide you with several
informational pages in a number of languages
to help you learn more about becoming a JSTOR
participant. |