The rise of open-access journals in response to initiatives such as Plan S has tightened the grip of big publishers on the scholarly publishing market, analysis claims
Publishers face being ¡®mere service providers¡¯ under new vision, but critics question whether global adoption of proposals will be any wider than their predecessors
Academics could cooperate to decommercialise publishing so that all students have affordable access to reliable information, says Michael Wynn-Williams
Only offering discounts for publication in fully open access journals is limiting the options of researchers in lower-income countries, says Daniel Keirs
¡®Astonishing demand¡¯ to suspend book launch over claims that its essays ¡®delegimitise trans people¡¯ shows activists have been ¡®emboldened¡¯, say editors
Platform offers scholars a way of building a profile and livelihood away from universities, but what makes a successful Substacker, and is there really room for everyone?
As scientists pursue groundbreaking discoveries for understanding the universe, ingrained publishing habits appear to leave students contending with outdated theories
Lengthy talks for opt-in read-and-publish deal, worth about €35 million a year,reached agreement as publisher warmed to open access and people involved in negotiations changed, consortium says
Affordable AI-powered writing software offers some hope to scholars unfairly criticised for their imperfect English, but more radical change is required, says Natalia Kucirkova
As university libraries invest heavily in digital resources, Caroline Ball explains why physical books are still vital for research, teaching and the preservation of knowledge
Editorial board of Design Studies quits alongside long-standing editor-in-chief, who blamed publisher¡¯s ¡®deeply exploitative¡¯ approach to running the title
Studying flocks of starlings helped Giorgio Parisi crack some of physics¡¯ deepest mysteries. The Nobelist talks to Matthew Reisz about his unconventional methods, missed eureka moments and being Italy¡¯s most in-demand scientist
ChatGPT¡¯s ability to churn out mediocre papers should lead us to reappraise how research is carried out, reported and evaluated, says Martyn Hammersley
With just 50 sub-Saharan journals listed in Scopus, it¡¯s time to consider how citation indexes are holding back scholarly publishing in Africa, argue David Mills and Natasha Robinson