Scholarly
Humanities Research Infrastructure is critical social investment, and we could support it better if we understood it better. The post Humanities Research Infrastructure is Great ROI — Will We Sell it Short? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
In the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, learned societies are facing some challenges that call for adaptive-transformative resilience. Guest author Trevor Perry-Giles discusses steps societies must take in crafting a "new normalcy" for sustainability. The post Guest Post — Building Resilient Learned Societies in an Age of Pandemic and Fear appeared first on The Scholarly…
The AGU recently published new research on diversity and inclusion in co-authorship of journal articles and conference abstracts. Learn more in this interview with Brooks Hanson, Jory Lerback, and Paige Wooden. The post It’s What You Know AND Who You Know: AGU Co-Authorship Demographics — An Interview with Brooks Hanson, Jory Lerback, and Paige Wooden …
This third episode of the SSP's Early Career Development Podcast covers the topic of ‘living under lockdown’ during the current global coronavirus pandemic. The post SSP’s Early Career Development Podcast: Episode 3 appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
So much change has happened in the last few months. What changes do you think will "stick" in scholarly publishing? The post Ask The Chefs: Permanent Change? appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Major scholarly publishers have made substantial investments in preprints in recent years, integrating preprint deposit into manuscript submission workflows. The post Publishers Invest in Preprints appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
What is the role of book content in the Science, Technical and Medical (STM) researcher ecosystem? The post Guest Post — Books for the 2020s: The Role of Book Content in the STM Researcher Ecosystem appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
A year without an annual meeting is tough to take. Here's hoping for better times ahead. The post A Tough Upcoming Week Without the SSP Annual Meeting appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Should the library focus first on serving its local constituency, or on changing the scholarly communication ecosystem? No matter how we answer this question, the implications will be complex. The post Utility, Morality, Strategy, and Scholarly Communication appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.
Making journal data on decision times and acceptance rates public would be tremendously helpful for authors in their decision-making process. The post Guest Post — Author-Friendly Journal Websites appeared first on The Scholarly Kitchen.