Stephen Casper and his father both published their respective academic text and novella in the same year, yet his father’s novella costs a fraction of the academic text and is available electronically. If publishing a book is the academic promised land, Stephen Casper asks why we don’t learn from those already self-publishing
In the academic world, or academia, one frequently hears dispiriting comments to the effect that sin...
The publishing system may be built into the DNA of academia, but academics can still make a change b...
This essay draws on scholarly and public-policy literature, along with personal experience, to exami...
The crisis in academic publishing raises fundamental questions about the nature of scholarly enquiry...
Universities are foolish to focus on academic superstars at the expense of staff that expand the ‘lo...
Since the Second World War, academic publishing practices have had to cope with enormous changes in...
This briefing paper aims to provide a historical perspective that can inform the debates about what ...
Part of an event organised by Book Machine and Emerald Publishers as part of national Academic Book ...
What exactly do book publishers bring to the table when academics look to reach wider audiences? Fra...
Publicly-funded science is suffering but academia must embrace technology before it can deliver its ...
Scientists have complained about the inconsistency and politics of academic publishing for hundreds ...
Academic publishing lives in challenging times. Besides the old cliché of “publish or perish”, coine...
This article is based on my inaugural professorial lecture, given atGoldsmiths, University of London...
The world of scholarly publishing is a complex one. At one end of the scholarly publishing spectrum ...
The popular axiom which suggests that there are two certainties in life (namely, taxes and death) sh...
In the academic world, or academia, one frequently hears dispiriting comments to the effect that sin...
The publishing system may be built into the DNA of academia, but academics can still make a change b...
This essay draws on scholarly and public-policy literature, along with personal experience, to exami...
The crisis in academic publishing raises fundamental questions about the nature of scholarly enquiry...
Universities are foolish to focus on academic superstars at the expense of staff that expand the ‘lo...
Since the Second World War, academic publishing practices have had to cope with enormous changes in...
This briefing paper aims to provide a historical perspective that can inform the debates about what ...
Part of an event organised by Book Machine and Emerald Publishers as part of national Academic Book ...
What exactly do book publishers bring to the table when academics look to reach wider audiences? Fra...
Publicly-funded science is suffering but academia must embrace technology before it can deliver its ...
Scientists have complained about the inconsistency and politics of academic publishing for hundreds ...
Academic publishing lives in challenging times. Besides the old cliché of “publish or perish”, coine...
This article is based on my inaugural professorial lecture, given atGoldsmiths, University of London...
The world of scholarly publishing is a complex one. At one end of the scholarly publishing spectrum ...
The popular axiom which suggests that there are two certainties in life (namely, taxes and death) sh...
In the academic world, or academia, one frequently hears dispiriting comments to the effect that sin...
The publishing system may be built into the DNA of academia, but academics can still make a change b...
This essay draws on scholarly and public-policy literature, along with personal experience, to exami...