DARIAH Friday Frontiers
Friends:
This is cross-posted from H-Hist-Bibl
Margaret DeLacy, acting as subscriber
Friends:
This is cross-posted from H-Hist-Bibl
Margaret DeLacy, acting as subscriber
Article of interest about Open Arabic Periodical Editions:
Till Grallert, "Open Arabic Periodical Editions: A Framework for Bootstrapped Scholarly Editions Outside the Global North," Digital Humanities Quarterly 16 no. 2 (2022). http://www.digitalhumanities.org/dhq/vol/16/2/000593/000593.html
In this post on its open humanities blog, DARIAH (Digital Research Infrastructure for the Arts and Humanities) presents their views on the European Union's ongoing review of the Future of scholarly publishing and scholarly communication:
Your network editor has reposted this from H-Announce. The byline reflects the original authorship.
Featured Job
"Scholarly publishing is in a state of change, and the centuries old model of traditional peer review-based publishing is under more pressure than ever to become faster and more open, writes Rachel Burley... Artificial intelligence is now supporting authors and publications alike by speeding up the publication process while helping to preserve quality with fewer human resources, and the tools can give journals competitive advantages for attracting authors.
Rebecca Pool discusses recent developments in "read and publish" (transformative) agreements with academic publishers in the United Kingdom:
Transformational OA agreements: help or hindrance? (Research Information, August/September 2021)
A monthly newsletter from Feeding the Elephant: A Forum for Scholarly Communications.
Conferences After COVID-19
Dylan Ruediger and Danielle Cooper, COVID-19 and the Future of the Annual Meeting, Ithaka S+R, October 18, 2021.
A post from Feeding the Elephant: A Forum for Scholarly Communications.
Guest post by Rachel Fleming-May, associate professor in the University of Tennessee’s School of Information Sciences