Scholarly
In today's post, Alice Meadows interviews Jodi Schneider of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign about the work she's leading to reduce the inadvertent spread of retracted research. The post Actions on Retractions: An Interview with Jodi Schneider appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Brigitte Shull from Cambridge University Press looks at the lessons learned so far from transformative agreements and how they continue to evolve. The post Guest Post – Transforming the Transformative Agreement appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Since 1996, the Internet Archive has been capturing the World Wide Web but also doing so much more to preserve our digital world behind the scenes. The post Celebrating 25 Years of Preserving the Web appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
The Scholarly Kitchen is seeking a new editor for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility coverage. The post We Are Seeking a Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility Associate Editor appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Some slow motion moths to soothe your Friday. The post Moths in Motion appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Katie Einhorn, Steph Pollock, and Nick Paolini discuss APA's efforts to collect demographic information during manuscript submission. In this interview, they share what they did, why, how, and what this means for other publishing organizations. The post Guest Post — Introducing Demographic Questions during Manuscript Submission at the American Psychological Association appeared first on The…
Revisiting a 2018 primer on the business side of publishing. The defining property of traditional publishing is editorial selection. That is what publishing is about. The post Revisiting: How Traditional Publishing Works appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Haseeb Irfanullah looks at recognition in peer review, what's offered now and what's on the horizon. How does this affect the process? The post Recognition in Peer Review appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
In 2014, Google created a disruption for both libraries (and publishers) with its digitization activities. Where do things stand now? What's needed to move forward? The post Book Review — Along Came Google: A History of Library Digitization appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
In Part 2 of this pair of posts we turn the tables and Gerald Beasley interviews Timon Oefelein of Springer Nature about how publishers can support the UN's Sustainable Development Goals. The post Guest Post — The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals and Open Access: Gerald Beasley Interviews Timon Oefelein (Part 2 of 2) appeared first…