AUTHOR COPYRIGHT
When you contribute content to The Museum Scholar, you retain full copyright over the content, but you grant TMS's publisher, Rogers Publishing, exclusive permission to publish it, reproduce it, and display it to the public via the Rogers Publishing imprints.
The Museum Scholar supports and encourages our authors to promote and disseminate their work. You do not need to request permission to reuse your article, including posting the final version on your own, you institution's, or your funder's website provided that appropriate credit is given to the journal. A link to the journal article should be included whenever possible. If any questions arise, do not hesitate to contact your Editor through the online article submission system or via editor@themuseumscholar.org.
CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSE
This is an Open Access journal, which means that all content is freely available without charge to readers. Users are permitted to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles, or use them for any other lawful non-commercial purpose without asking prior permission from the publisher or the author.
For a work to be Open Access, the copyright holder must consent in advance to let readers utilize the material. To make this possible, authors agree to an irrevocable Creative Commons (CC) copyright license for their work that permits others to use the material under certain specified conditions while giving credit to the author. Each article is licensed with a Creative Commons license in order to share published material to support the greater public exchange of knowledge.
The Museum Scholar publishing agreement asks authors to approve assigning the most restrictive Creative Commons license available to their work: CC Attribution - Non-commercial Use - No Derivative Works (CC-BY-NC-ND). CC-BY-NC-ND only authorizes users to download, read, and share your work for non-commercial purposes provided that you are credited by citing the work, but users may not modify your work in any way whatsoever. Copyright holders retain the right to block the distribution of misattributed copies - blocking plagiarism, misrepresentation, and commercial re-use.