Having a plan in place to quickly and efficiently bring on new editors can smooth editorial board transitions and help spur positive innovations at your journal.
As more academics seek to find and share research on the web, innovations in digital journal publishing and promotion are becoming more important than ever.
During free on-demand webinar editors share tales from the field and insights on what it takes to get an open access publication off the ground.
If you're planning on revamping your journal's website, here are seven questions your editorial board should ask yourselves before getting started.
The OA Journal Starter Kit has all the information you'll need to get a new open access journal up and running.
One of the top challenges and simultaneous best opportunities for new open access journals to develop a following is to find a unique niche in the marketplace.
To keep predatory journals off Scholastica, we've developed a set of requirements journals must meet before they can be activated and allowed to accept submissions.
The Scholastica team compiled an infographic of Timothy Gowers' research uncovering how much universities are actually paying for Elsevier journals.
Open access isn't the problem – it's that we have a system of publication fees, mostly a relic of a bygone era, that has provided monetary incentives for predatory publishers.
Our friends Bertrand Russell, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Simone de Beauvoir, and Maurice and Merleau-Ponty had success using Scholastica recently and wanted their story told.