Does your journal have clear ethical requirements for authors? Here are best practices your team can use to revisit and build upon existing policies.
In a new video series on law school teaching best practices, AALS and LegalED call upon law professors to share how they are beginning to think differently about legal education.
Tackling that first journal submission can be a great learning experience for scholars, particularly graduate students working on their PhD thesis.
Anaid Yerena, Assistant Professor of Urban Studies at University of Washington Tacoma, details the kinds of projects she's worked on and how she's making her research more openly accessible.
Social media makes it possible to transport yourself to concurrent sessions at academic conferences and engage with others both physically in attendance and online.
As the scope of digital humanities initiatives continues to evolve and grow, scholars and librarians are surfacing innovative possibilities for the field.
Authors of Making Institutional Repositories Work delve into the history of IRs and the experiences of libraries currently in varying stages of IR development.
Anita Harris managing editor of SubStance: A Review of Theory and Literary Criticism shares tips to write constructive rejections that authors may actually appreciate
How has and how will the overload of digital information impact the way that scholars look to absorb, disseminate, and assess new knowledge in journals and beyond?
Rather than charge authors article processing fees upon acceptance, some journals charge every author a relatively small manuscript submission fee instead. The benefits of this model are several.