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Still waiting for the new electronic order

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Still waiting for the new electronic order. / May, Christopher.
In: E-International Relations, 11.08.2013.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineComment/debate

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May C. Still waiting for the new electronic order. E-International Relations. 2013 Aug 11.

Author

May, Christopher. / Still waiting for the new electronic order. In: E-International Relations. 2013.

Bibtex

@article{0b729dfcdebd4580870c422036242ab8,
title = "Still waiting for the new electronic order",
abstract = "Nearly a decade ago I ruminated on the place open access publishing might have in political studies, and by extension International Relations and suggested that the future of open access publishing was in the hands of the academic community. As a community the academy has always utilised academic publishers of journals as external guarantors of quality and so any change in these practices is up to us; the question is have we actually chosen to move our work into the realm of open access? In this short comment, I reflect on my own experience and wider developments to suggest movement towards open access is actually slower than its champions might have hoped.",
keywords = "open access, academic publishing",
author = "Christopher May",
year = "2013",
month = aug,
day = "11",
language = "English",
journal = "E-International Relations",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Still waiting for the new electronic order

AU - May, Christopher

PY - 2013/8/11

Y1 - 2013/8/11

N2 - Nearly a decade ago I ruminated on the place open access publishing might have in political studies, and by extension International Relations and suggested that the future of open access publishing was in the hands of the academic community. As a community the academy has always utilised academic publishers of journals as external guarantors of quality and so any change in these practices is up to us; the question is have we actually chosen to move our work into the realm of open access? In this short comment, I reflect on my own experience and wider developments to suggest movement towards open access is actually slower than its champions might have hoped.

AB - Nearly a decade ago I ruminated on the place open access publishing might have in political studies, and by extension International Relations and suggested that the future of open access publishing was in the hands of the academic community. As a community the academy has always utilised academic publishers of journals as external guarantors of quality and so any change in these practices is up to us; the question is have we actually chosen to move our work into the realm of open access? In this short comment, I reflect on my own experience and wider developments to suggest movement towards open access is actually slower than its champions might have hoped.

KW - open access

KW - academic publishing

M3 - Comment/debate

JO - E-International Relations

JF - E-International Relations

ER -