What does the future hold for academic books? Rebecca Lyons introduces The Academic Book of the Future, a two-year project funded by the AHRC in collaboration with the British Library in which a cross-disciplinary team from University College London and King’s College London explores how scholarly work in the Arts and Humanities will be produced, read, shared, and preserved in coming years, and investigates key questions around the changing state and modern contexts of the academic book
As consumers of books become more connected via a global online network of readers and texts, the di...
Of course it does. Although that answer is convenient and perhaps reassuring, it is too short to be ...
Part of an event organised by Book Machine and Emerald Publishers as part of national Academic Book ...
Between August 2014 and September 2016, the Academic Book of the Future Project, initiated by the Ar...
This article had its genesis in the joint paper we gave at the Scholarly Networks and the Emerging P...
In early 2014, the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) partnered with The British Library to...
Part of the AHRC/British Library Academic Book of the Future Project, this book interrogates current...
Between August 2014 and September 2016, the Academic Book of the Future Project, initiated by the Ar...
The Academic Book of the Future is a two-year project funded by the AHRC in association with the Bri...
The Academic Book of the Future is a research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Cou...
Today marks the beginning of Academic Book Week (#AcBookWeek), “the week-long celebration of the div...
The future of the academic book is a strategic engagement issue for librarians. Books might not be s...
The e-book is raising fundamental questions around the dynamics and habits of reading; the role of b...
Yesterday Steven Hill spoke at the University Press Redux conference in Liverpool on the role of pol...
This article evaluates the current state of academic book publishing based on the findings of the Hy...
As consumers of books become more connected via a global online network of readers and texts, the di...
Of course it does. Although that answer is convenient and perhaps reassuring, it is too short to be ...
Part of an event organised by Book Machine and Emerald Publishers as part of national Academic Book ...
Between August 2014 and September 2016, the Academic Book of the Future Project, initiated by the Ar...
This article had its genesis in the joint paper we gave at the Scholarly Networks and the Emerging P...
In early 2014, the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) partnered with The British Library to...
Part of the AHRC/British Library Academic Book of the Future Project, this book interrogates current...
Between August 2014 and September 2016, the Academic Book of the Future Project, initiated by the Ar...
The Academic Book of the Future is a two-year project funded by the AHRC in association with the Bri...
The Academic Book of the Future is a research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Cou...
Today marks the beginning of Academic Book Week (#AcBookWeek), “the week-long celebration of the div...
The future of the academic book is a strategic engagement issue for librarians. Books might not be s...
The e-book is raising fundamental questions around the dynamics and habits of reading; the role of b...
Yesterday Steven Hill spoke at the University Press Redux conference in Liverpool on the role of pol...
This article evaluates the current state of academic book publishing based on the findings of the Hy...
As consumers of books become more connected via a global online network of readers and texts, the di...
Of course it does. Although that answer is convenient and perhaps reassuring, it is too short to be ...
Part of an event organised by Book Machine and Emerald Publishers as part of national Academic Book ...