Public criticism, customer boycotts, political controversies, and investor skepticism have created a volatile environment for ...
Fake papers are contaminating the world’s scientific literature, fueling a corrupt industry and slowing legitimate lifesaving ...
Over the past decade, furtive commercial entities around the world have industrialized the production, sale and dissemination ...
The Center for Open Science (COS) is excited to announce that Lifecycle Journal, a 3-year research and development pilot on a new model of scholarly communication, is now open for submissions.
Fans of Scientific American might have hoped that activist journalism would leave the magazine along with former editor Laura ...
Ofsted, England's education inspectorate, has proposed changes to the way it assesses schools, colleges and universities that ...
The R&D cell and IQAC of St Agnes College organized an insightful seminar titled ‘Strategic insights for scholarly publishing ...
Should unredacted details about Dr. King’s case come to light, the Museum is committed to conducting a thorough and scholarly ...
Editor’s Note: Previously, this series on scholarly publishing has offered advice on approaching an editor, getting a book contract, and writing a “timely” book. Peer review can be stressful ...
Millionaires, Medievalism, and Modernity in Toronto’s Gilded Age Edited by Matthew M. Reeve and Michael Windover (MQUP, 2023) ...
The author-editor relationship should be a dance, not a duel. An author is not at the mercy of the process; you are a partner ...
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