Scholarly
We are off for the US Labor Day holiday, but wanted to say thanks to all who do the hard work of scholarly communications. The post Off for Labor Day: Get Behind the Mule appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
As our community bursts into motion, we offer a moment to slow down. The post Slow Down with Hummingbirds appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Announcing the first releases from our new program to create and offer translations of Scholarly Kitchen posts into different languages. The post Announcing Scholarly Kitchen Translation Collections appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Day 2 of Chef reactions to the OSTP Policy memo. What are your thoughts? Share your views with the Scholarly Kitchen community. The post Ask The Chefs: OSTP Policy Part II appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Everyone has an opinion about the OSTP Policy memo! Come over and hear what the Chefs have to say and share your opinions with us. Part 1 of a 2 part post. The post Ask The Chefs: OSTP Policy Part I appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Some initial thoughts on the new OSTP memo on public access to results of federally funded research -- and questions about its intent and implications. The post A New OSTP Memo: Some Initial Observations and Questions appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
How do you make a candy cane and how does candy behave as a non-Newtonian fluid? The post Making Hard Candy: Non-Newtonian Fluids appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
A Humanities and Social Sciences Publishing Professionals Community of Interest Network is launching! An interview with facilitators Laura Ansley and Dawn Durante about the group and its focus --and how it's meeting a clear need. The post The SSP Humanities Community Network Lifts Off appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
The University of Michigan Press discusses its burgeoning open access monograph program. The post Guest Post — The Monograph and the Mission: University of Michigan Pledges $1.2 Million to Fund Open Access Book Publishing appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
What brings humanities infrastructure together -- whether materials-based (content) or process-based (projects) or tools-based (platforms and laboratories) -- is an iterative process of knowledge creation. Revisiting a post from 2020. The post Revisiting: Humanities Research Infrastructure is Great ROI appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.