This article briefly sets out a political economy of academic publishing, exploring what the costs and benefits of this model are/were for the academic community. It then moves to explore forms of open access publication available to the social science (politics and international relations) community in the United Kingdom and beyond. The article concludes by asking why (given its likely advantages), the open access model is not ubiquitous and suggests that the future of publication lies in the hands of early career researchers
Traditionally, the scholarly journal market operates so that research institutions are charged high ...
Much of the discussion about the merits of Open Access (OA) publishing has centred on the numbers; o...
This article presents the rationale, common practices, challenges, and some personal anecdotes from ...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
This article introduces a Symposium which brings together the academic and publishing industry in tw...
This article introduces a Symposium which brings together the academic and publishing industry in tw...
This article introduces a Symposium which brings together the academic and publishing industry in tw...
<p>This is an article I wrote for DG Research, Science and Innovation of the European Commission as ...
The economics of scholarly publishing are incredibly tangled. Even Harvard University cannot afford ...
The economics of scholarly publishing are incredibly tangled. Even Harvard University cannot afford ...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
This is an article I wrote for DG Research, Science and Innovation of the European Commission as mem...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The increasing shift towards digital publishing has provoked much debate concerning the issues surro...
With the spread of the internet and new opportunities for publishing academic works digitally at vir...
Traditionally, the scholarly journal market operates so that research institutions are charged high ...
Much of the discussion about the merits of Open Access (OA) publishing has centred on the numbers; o...
This article presents the rationale, common practices, challenges, and some personal anecdotes from ...
A large part of the academic literature sits behind a paywall, which is an obstacle for researchers ...
This article introduces a Symposium which brings together the academic and publishing industry in tw...
This article introduces a Symposium which brings together the academic and publishing industry in tw...
This article introduces a Symposium which brings together the academic and publishing industry in tw...
<p>This is an article I wrote for DG Research, Science and Innovation of the European Commission as ...
The economics of scholarly publishing are incredibly tangled. Even Harvard University cannot afford ...
The economics of scholarly publishing are incredibly tangled. Even Harvard University cannot afford ...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
This is an article I wrote for DG Research, Science and Innovation of the European Commission as mem...
Open Access to scholarly literature seems to dominate current discussions in the academic publishing...
The increasing shift towards digital publishing has provoked much debate concerning the issues surro...
With the spread of the internet and new opportunities for publishing academic works digitally at vir...
Traditionally, the scholarly journal market operates so that research institutions are charged high ...
Much of the discussion about the merits of Open Access (OA) publishing has centred on the numbers; o...
This article presents the rationale, common practices, challenges, and some personal anecdotes from ...