This is my first editorial since Internet Archaeology switched completely to open access. Over the last 4 years, we had been making active efforts to achieve our open access goal, by changing to a default CC-BY licence, by opening up our back issues with an annual rolling wall, and by adjusting our subscription charges accordingly. During this time, we also witnessed a marked increase in quality, funded submissions, including several themed issues. Internet Archaeology has always tried to be more than just a journal. We explore the possibilities of the web and have delved into many different publication formats. This flexibility extends into everything we do. Being a small operation has meant we could be responsive to changes in the wider...
The Internet has fundamentally changed the publishing of scholarly peer reviewed journals and the wa...
There are three important frontiers in moving from subscription-based scholarly publications to deli...
More scholars are exploring forms of digital dissemination, including open access (OA) systems where...
Issue Four of Internet Archaeology is now complete, and with it we end the first phase of the Intern...
The rise of the World Wide Web represents one of the most significant transitions in communications ...
Editorial for issue 40. 2016 marks 20 years since Internet Archaeology’s first issue was published
There has been more interest than I'd ever anticipated in issue 6 "Digital Publication", the first t...
We have just celebrated ten years of open access public archaeology, and now we carry on with our ve...
Editorial (intro): Welcome to the very first fully Open Access issue of the Media Education Research...
Open Science best practices and policies have been increasingly promoted and adopted in Europe and w...
In 2004, the four Welsh archaeological trusts began an assessment of the Iron Age hillforts, promont...
Seminar.net enters it’s fourth year, and has reached a state of maturity in a number of meanings: it...
Since its foundation in 1995, the e-journal Internet Archaeology has been exploring imaginative and ...
This editorial presents the various forms of open access, discusses their pros and cons from the per...
This issue saw yet another wide spread of content ranging from field survey results from work in sou...
The Internet has fundamentally changed the publishing of scholarly peer reviewed journals and the wa...
There are three important frontiers in moving from subscription-based scholarly publications to deli...
More scholars are exploring forms of digital dissemination, including open access (OA) systems where...
Issue Four of Internet Archaeology is now complete, and with it we end the first phase of the Intern...
The rise of the World Wide Web represents one of the most significant transitions in communications ...
Editorial for issue 40. 2016 marks 20 years since Internet Archaeology’s first issue was published
There has been more interest than I'd ever anticipated in issue 6 "Digital Publication", the first t...
We have just celebrated ten years of open access public archaeology, and now we carry on with our ve...
Editorial (intro): Welcome to the very first fully Open Access issue of the Media Education Research...
Open Science best practices and policies have been increasingly promoted and adopted in Europe and w...
In 2004, the four Welsh archaeological trusts began an assessment of the Iron Age hillforts, promont...
Seminar.net enters it’s fourth year, and has reached a state of maturity in a number of meanings: it...
Since its foundation in 1995, the e-journal Internet Archaeology has been exploring imaginative and ...
This editorial presents the various forms of open access, discusses their pros and cons from the per...
This issue saw yet another wide spread of content ranging from field survey results from work in sou...
The Internet has fundamentally changed the publishing of scholarly peer reviewed journals and the wa...
There are three important frontiers in moving from subscription-based scholarly publications to deli...
More scholars are exploring forms of digital dissemination, including open access (OA) systems where...