Tag:academic publishing

Scholastica announces a new guide to help scholars and institutions navigate the many avenues for running academy-owned open access journals and facilitating community-led publishing models - The Essentials of Academic-Led Journal Publishing.

Three ways that academic journals can better acknowledge and support the vast network of ESL authors to help them navigate manuscript preparation and to encourage more global research policy and dissemination.

Mark C. Wilson, senior lecturer in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Auckland and open access advocate, discusses how he helped launch MathOA and the Free Journal Network, the core aims of the organizations, and plans for the future.

Now journals publishing on Scholastica can add a custom page to their website and journals using Scholastica's Production Service will get Google Scholar links in all of their references. Check out these latest features!

In this post, we look at 3 areas of manuscript submissions and peer review that can test authors' trust in your journal and how to address them.

Despite the benefits of embracing modern innovations, some industries have been slow to adopt them - academic publishing being a prime example. In this post, we break out 3 vestiges of print publishing that journals are holding onto online and why it's holding them back.

There are certain considerations OA journal teams should keep in mind when choosing which peer review and publishing tools and systems to use. In this post, we outline 3 things to consider.

New public resource page provides an overview of the academic-led publishing movement and resources for scholars and institutions looking to support or launch academic-led titles.

This post examines why academic-led journal publishing is key to lowering the rising cost of research and the technology that's defining the academic-led publishing movement, including a detailed case study.

When it comes to effective editorial team operations, Jennifer Mahar, executive peer review manager at Origin Editorial, says there are certain hallmarks that set apart the best teams from the rest.