cOAlition S and ALPSP publish OA toolkit
Smaller independent publishers, libraries, and consortia can now more easily enter into open access agreements
Smaller independent publishers, libraries, and consortia can now more easily enter into open access agreements
The 4th ALPSP University Press Redux 2022 will take place virtually in partnership with Cambridge University Press.
Resource will provide information on a wide selection of topics across scholarly publishing
Finalists will be invited to showcase their innovation to industry peers at event in September
The Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers – ALPSP – has announced its shortlist for the ALPSP Awards for Innovation in Publishing 2020
The Redux Conference 2020 is moving to the summer and will become an open, online event called Redux Online
The winners of the 2019 ALPSP Awards were announced at the ALPSP Conference Dinner last week
Academic publishing could be about to return to a not-for-profit enterprise
James Gray assesses the situation and how it can be addressed
Matt Balara explains how an established publisher, De Gruyter, completed an extraordinary transformation
From rapid disease information to a way to promote and share regional knowledge in multiple languages, preprints have come into their own in recent years. Siân Harris finds out more
Céline Richard explains what the Large Hadron Collider has taught us about the importance of open access research
Ivy Cavendish tells the inspirational tale behind the formation of a writing tool for researchers, TooWrite
There is a continuing need for the sorts of insights and judgements that only a person can bring, writes David Stuart
COUNTER reports have an integral role to play in our wider scholarly communication system, writes Tasha Mellins-Cohen
Emerald Publishing CEO Tony Roche talks of his career in scholarly publishing and a love of eastern cuisine
Alicia Wise, CLOCKSS executive director, reflects on her career and explains the importance of robustly preserving academic resources
Heather Staines sums up proceedings at this year's Researcher to Reader conference