Managing Sport and Leisure is a refereed journal that publishes high quality research articles to inform and stimulate discussions relevant to sport and leisure management globally. The Forum Editor’s pick from the current issue: Why do young women stop playing basketball? Results of an Australian Study by Elizabeth Sayers.| idrottsforum.org
JSM encourages the submission of manuscripts in a number of areas as they relate to the management, governance, and consumption of sport. Studies using quantitative and/or qualitative approaches are welcomed. The Forum Editor’s pick from the current issue: Did Changing the Ball Manufacturer Impact the Sporting Contest in English Cricket by Johan Rewilak.| idrottsforum.org
What The Media Don’t Tell You About Measles Sally Fallon Morell dispels vitamin A fears Treating Measles With Cod Liver Oil Dr. Ben Edwards talks about treating measles […] The post Journal, Summer 2025 appeared first on The Weston A. Price Foundation.| The Weston A. Price Foundation
As readers and listeners of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY may recall, I am guest editing a special issue of Feminist Philosophy Quarterly on the theme “Foucault and Feminist Philosophy: Other Perspectives and Approaches,” which will commemorate the one hundred-year anniversary of Michel Foucault’s birth on October 15, 1926. Late in September, I will begin to receive the […]| BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
The Philosophy Journal Insight Project, which collects and organizes information about philosophy journals, has grown a bit since we first reported on it last year and is asking journals to submit data via a new "operations survey". In the following guest post, Sam Andrews, a recent philosophy PhD from the University of Birmingham who created and directs| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
"Current dissatisfaction with peer review is such an opportunity for change, so we call for taking advantage of this opportunity as fully as we can. We build our recommendations on the idea that mutual critical engagement is a skill developed through ongoing practice and actual engagement with each other’s ideas." In the following guest post,| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
The Philosophy Journal Insight Project (PJIP) "aims to provide philosophy researchers with practical insights on potential venues for publication." Its main offering is a spreadsheet that provides information about journals' subject matter, word limits, type of peer review, open access status, rankings, impact information, acceptance rates, review times, reviewing quality, and so on. Put together| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
Here’s a comprehensive subscription service for colleges and universities, integrating Gale’s proprietary databases, reference content, and unique primary sources. It supports research, teaching, and learning with millions of pages of cross-searchable content on an accessible platform, benefiting users at all academic levels and covering nearly every research area. Strengths: • Cross-Search Experience: Users can search […] The post Gale Research Complete appeared first on EdTech Digest.| EdTech Digest
Journal for New Narratives in the History of Philosophy (JNNHP) is a new, online, open-access, peer-reviewed journal. The journal’s focus is “leading-edge research relating to new narratives in any period in the history of philosophy [and] discussion of and scholarship on diverse, underrepresented, and non-canonical approaches, themes, and figures in a wide variety of world philosophical traditions.” The editors write: Our goal is to provide a platform for philosophical research that c...| Daily Nous
“We do not publish any work advancing views that are clearly contrary to the established teachings of the Catholic Church.” That’s in the submission guidelines for the National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly (NCBQ). Also in those submission guidelines: The NCBQ seeks to foster intellectual inquiry on moral issues by publishing articles that address the ethical, philosophical, theological, and clinical questions raised by the rapid pace of modern medical and technological progress. Inspi...| Daily Nous
Picture this: you're sipping your morning cup of PG Tips Tea, contemplating a third hobnob biscuit dunker, ready to tackle another day of IBM i wizardry, when| Nick Litten [IBM i AS400 iSeries] Software Developer
The University of Pennsylvania Press journals program will continue to expand in 2026, adding a new title and transitioning one of our existing journals| University of Pennsylvania Press
Natural disasters in the Middle Ages were met with resilience in a number of different ways: migration, rebuilding, re-settlements. The post Medieval Natural Disasters and Resilience appeared first on Medieval Histories.| Medieval Histories
This creative collection of writing prompts for middle school offers a diverse range of ideas to spark imagination and creativity. Journaling has never been more exciting!| JournalBuddies.com
A friend of his from primary school said to me “I can’t believe it… really, it’s like he will come bouncing out of a door any minute, hopping out of a car with his big grin on his face. Any moment we could wake up from this terrible dream”. For those of us who knew […]| Home
A recent survey of 66 learned societies (primarily in the UK) revealed a revenue crisis which threatens the very existence of community-driven publishing, and by extension learned societies themselves.| The Scholarly Kitchen
Learn how to overcome fear with small steps, honest faith, and God’s promises. Show up in daily life, even when you're afraid.| Jodie Randolph
"The Journal of Political Philosophy will cease publication effective January 1, 2026." That's from an email sent by the journal's publisher, Wiley, earlier today, calling the move "a difficult decision." Wiley had attempted to keep the journal going without an academic editorial team in place, but those efforts have now come to an end. The| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
Journals and peer review are unlikely to change for the better if the companies that operate scientific indexes and citation databases continue to stifle innovation. At eLife we believe that the content of a research article is more important than the name or impact factor of the journal in which it is published. Our approach to scientific publishing – which we adopted in 2023 – combines the immediacy and openness of preprints with the expert evaluation provided by peer review.| DORA
The John Maddox Prize has been awarded annually since 2012 to “researchers who have shown great courage and integrity in standing up for science and scientific reasoning against fierce opposition and hostility”. The prize is a joint initiative between the journal Nature and the Sense about Science charity. Fergus Kane nominated Alexandra Elbakyan, creator of Sci-Hub, for the prize in 2018. While selected to a final shortlist, she did not win. Dr. Kane has nominated …| Satoshi Village
Should citations in scholarly writing appear as author-year snippets, like (Pantcheva, 2018; Zelle, 2015), or numbers, like [1,2]? Let’s refer to these two methods as author-style and numeric-style. You may have also heard them referred to as the Harvard and Vancouver referencing systems. Author-style Here’s an example of author-style from our recent Sci-Hub Coverage Study published in eLife. First, see how citations appear in the main text: Notice how studies with 3 …| Satoshi Village
Last June, I released a summary of the recent publishing delays at 3,475 journals. The post attracted lots of attention via Twitter and Nature News, primarily because scientists are frustrated with the sluggish pace of publishing. However, a major question remained. Are publication delays getting shorter or longer? Kendall Powell, writing a feature for Nature News released in tandem with this post, contacted me. Her investigation had uncovered a widespread belief that delays were …| Satoshi Village
On April 22, 2015 my research was formally accepted to PLOS Computational Biology. 68 days later the article has yet to be published. My current project builds on the forthcoming study and would benefit from its publication. Frustrated, I decided to investigate whether such delays are commonplace at PLOS. Publication and acceptance delays at PLOS I started by retrieving all PubMed records for the 7 PLOS journals. For each journal, I randomly selected 1000 articles …| Satoshi Village
Discover how Lulu empowers travel agencies and tourism boards to publish guides, photo books, calendars, and more with easy print-on-demand solutions.| Write, Publish, & Sell
IOP Publishing (IOPP) and the Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine (IPEM) are strengthening their long-standing partnership through a new agreement that will see the transfer of the journal Medical Engineering and Physics (MEP) to IOPP’s platform alongside the launch of Medical Sensors and Imaging (MSI), a new gold open access (OA) journal on […]| IOP Publishing
The innovative F1000Research open research publishing model was launched in 2012 and was born out of a desire to start again, thinking about the technology and tools at the time and redesigning how we share and critically review new discoveries and support others to then build on them. The biggest challenge is the way that we typically currently assess and incentivise researchers and the research processes that they use, which together in effect disincentivises the use of these new publishing...| DORA
By Romy Rajan, author of “Subaltern Mosquitoes and Cyborg Histories in Namwali Serpell’s The Old Drift,”Journal of Modern Literature 48.4 (Spring 2025),... The post Mosquito narrators and the subaltern voice: A Closer Look at JML 48.3 appeared first on Indiana University Press.| Indiana University Press
By Mark Taylor (Vassar College) **Read Taylor’s article “Introduction: Victorian Idealisms” free for a limited time on Project MUSE. In his Autobiography,| Indiana University Press
Discover a simple 4-step process for finding your identity and living from your authentic self—rooted in faith, clarity, and purpose.| Jodie Randolph
The post Judging research on its own merits: How MetaROR supports better research assessment appeared first on DORA.| DORA
Many MIT Press journals rank highly in their fields with 2024 impact factors, with Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics and International Security hitting top spots.| MIT Press
We all had to start somewhere, right? . I’ve been trying to clean my office in preparation for our annual week-long familay vaca in York, Maine later this summer, and I happened upon more ancient artifacts relics issues of my college newspaper, The Spartan. It’s changed a lot since I was the managing editor back … Continue reading Poetry Friday: Looking to the past, and the future (and to my summer hiatus)| Radio, Rhythm & Rhyme
From now on, "new submissions of manuscripts that are published as research articles in Nature will automatically include a link to the reviewers’ reports and author responses." The identity of the reviewers will not be revealed, unless the reviewers themselves choose otherwise. For several years, authors at Nature have had the option to have the peer-review file| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
I hope you enjoy this reflection on resilience in learning. It’s been one of the keys to freedom and creativity for me. I sort of abandoned technique somewhere along the way. I don’t think I even noticed the shift. It was more of a slow dissolve than a hard break. I used to teach dance... The post Resilience in Learning: Choosing Principles Over Prescription appeared first on Jodie Randolph.| Jodie Randolph
Simple ways to build resilience using intuition, principles, and adaptability for life, work, and relationships.| Jodie Randolph
The MIT Press welcomes the open access journal from ESA, the European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology.| MIT Press
Ceræ invites the participation of book reviewers for our twelfth volume. If you have not previously written an academic book review, this is no barrier to requesting a book to review, and indeed we encourage and publish reviews from established scholars to junior graduate students and everyone in between. Interested scholars should contact the Reviews … Continue reading Call for Reviewers: CERÆ volume 12| CERÆ: An Australasian Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
2025 is upon us, and with it comes the publication of Ceræ’s eleventh volume, featuring three themed articles, two creative varia, and a record nineteen book reviews. This issue follows the theme of ‘Metamorphosis, Transformation, and Transmutation‘: we sought articles that addressed shifts in reality, in body, in nature, and in society. The three themed articles interact … Continue reading Ceræ Volume 11: Published!| CERÆ: An Australasian Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
With the release of the new Summer 2025 Methodologies issue, Mechademia: Second Arc, the major “forum for studying objects and practices that have developed around media forms associated with Japan” is now approaching its twentieth anniversary (although publication was paused in 2016 and 2017). The twenty-three issues that have appeared since the journal first launched, […] The post Call for Papers – Mechademia: Second Arc, 19.1 “Semiosis/Symbiosis” appeared first on Anime and Man...| Anime and Manga Studies
This is for the multi-passionate person who doesn’t fit a job title, you are not alone on your non-linear path.| Jodie Randolph
The Summer Solstice 2025 offers a profound opportunity to reflect on the interplay of God's creation and His enduring love.| Jodie Randolph
Today, let’s discuss how to rest in a culture that never stops. If you’ve ever collapsed at the end of a long day wondering why you’re so tired when you barely did anything, you’re not alone. We’re living in a rest deficit and the irony is, most of us don’t even know what true rest actually looks like. This... The post How to Rest in a Culture That Never Stops appeared first on Jodie Randolph.| Jodie Randolph
A little note on how to trust the process. There’s a tender place we all find ourselves at times, right at the beginning of something new. Maybe it’s a new project, a new challenge, or a slow start toward personal growth. Maybe you’re working hard on a dream that’s still hidden, like a seed just... The post Trust the Process: An Artist’s Take On Letting Go appeared first on Jodie Randolph.| Jodie Randolph
We were created in the image of a Creator. That’s not just a nice poetic line, it’s a theological truth with huge implications. In the beginning, God created. He formed beauty, order, function, and flourishing out of chaos and void. And then He invited us into it. Let’s explore a definition of work. Work in the Beginning... The post A Definition of Work: Finding Meaning In Our Doing appeared first on Jodie Randolph.| Jodie Randolph
A few years ago, I tormented you with some of the poems I discovered from my old writing journals that I kept when I was in high school. You remember, don’t you? Of course, you do! How could anyone forget the classic “Ode to a Dishrag“? Well, there’s more. Sorry. You see, we recently remodelled … Continue reading Poetry Friday: Taking a leap back in time to discover some of the worst poetry ever written and subsequently shared with the public oh my God I’m so sorry| Radio, Rhythm & Rhyme
Penn Press is delighted to announce that five of our journals will have open-access content in 2025 as part of the successful launch of Project MUSE’s Subscribe to Open Program (S2O).... READ MORE The post Penn Press Celebrates Major Stride Towards Open Access appeared first on University of Pennsylvania Press.| University of Pennsylvania Press
The History of Social Science has published its first issue. Sponsored by the Society for the History of Recent Social Science (HISRESS), the journal offers an international forum for the... READ MORE The post First issue of History of Social Science now available appeared first on University of Pennsylvania Press.| University of Pennsylvania Press
Special Editor: Lucia Morawska (Richmond, The American International University in London) “The Polish Journal of Aesthetics” Volume 77 (2/2026) Submission deadline: 30 Septem…| BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
By Jeffrey Careyva, author of “‘The Mind and the Poem Are All Apiece’: William Carlos Williams and the Dysfluent Poetics of Aphasia,” Journal of Modern| Indiana University Press
By Sierra Eckert (Wesleyan University) and Milan Terlunen (Johns Hopkins University) **Read Eckert and Terlunen’s article “What We Quote: Disciplinary| Indiana University Press
I've just been sent an email from eLife, pointing me to links to a report called "eLife's New Model: One year on" and a report by the editors "Scientific Publishing: The first year of a new era". To remind readers who may have missed it, the big change introduced by eLife in 2023 was to drop the step where an editor decides on reject or accept of a manuscript after reviewer comments are received. Instead, the author submits a preprint, and the editors then decide whether it should be reviewe...| BishopBlog
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – After more than three decades, the editorship of the Philosophy of Music Education Review, the premier refereed| Indiana University Press
This week’s quote-of-the-week post (though it’s only Thursday) draws attention to the marginalization of Foucauldian scholarship on disability and the continuing absence of critical phi…| BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
The following is a guest post* by Neil Sinhababu, Associate Professor of Philosophy at National University of Singapore. It concerns a publication crisis: how the number of new journal submissions outstrips the number of places to publish all of them, creating a backlog. 2,000 Spaces For 10,000 Papers: Why Everything Gets Rejected & Referees Are| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
Several publishers have policies that say that a manuscript rejected by one of its journals may be referred to another of its journals. At Wiley, referee reports are transferred along with the manuscript. Here's its policy: Such manuscripts and their peer review reports will be transferred to the receiving journal to expedite any further evaluation| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
[Versión castellana] [English version] Miquel Térmens Graells Degà de la Facultat d’Informació i Mitjans Audiovisuals. Universitat de Barcelona termens@ub.edu ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7305-3424 EXIT: https://www.directorioexit.info/ficha136 Jordi Sánchez-Navarro Director dels Estudis de Ciències de la Informació i Comunicació. Universitat Oberta de Catalunya jsancheznav@uoc.edu ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0311-1385 EXIT: https://www.directorioexit.info/ficha3815 ...| BID
The Centre is excited to announce the publication of our latest issue of the Review of Constitutional Studies, which is now available via EBSCO and will be available in due course on Heinonline. This latest issue, issue 28.2, is an open issue that also features two reprinted articles by Professors…| Centre for Constitutional Studies
Maybe you're among those who are hoping for drastic changes to the practices and norms of reviewing manuscripts for publication in philosophy journals. - But if you thought it took too long for that journal to get back to you with a decision on your last paper, well, that was nothing compared to how long| Daily Nous - news for & about the philosophy profession
A review article with some obviously fake and non-scientific illustrations created by Artificial Intelligence (AI) was the talk on X (Twitter) today. The figures in the paper were generated by the …| Science Integrity Digest
The International Nursing Association for Clinical and Simulation Learning (INACSL) is an association dedicated to advancing the field of clinical simulation. With over 1,800 members worldwide, the...| HealthySimulation.com
Medical Simulation is an emerging professional field within healthcare education, training, and patient safety. Healthcare Simulation Research Journals have paved the way for academic exploration, understanding, and evolution of the modern day methodology with numerous unique moving parts including: scenario development, debriefing, facilitation, technology, operations, learning theories, and more. Here we list all of the| HealthySimulation.com
In 2025, we are proud to add three journals to our list of twenty-eight titles in the humanities and social sciences: Foucault Studies, Global Black| University of Pennsylvania Press
NOVEMBER Sunday, November 1st– I think everyone knows someone with an old, worn-out, poorly cared-for car that has something wrong with it (examples: the passenger door won’t open from the outside, and the driver has to reach over and open … Continue reading →| The Great Indoorsman
Academic publishing is a strange beast, and it’s getting stranger. Authors write for free, reviewers work uncompensated, and editorial boards volunteer their time and expertise. Nobody is ever paid for their writing. You’d hope that at the end of that process journal articles would be inexpensive, but of course they’re not. In 2024, you can […] The post CDJ Plus is Dead! Long Live CDJ Plus! appeared first on CDJ.| CDJ
The post Knowledge Unlatched Shares Results of 2022 Pledging appeared first on Knowledge Unlatched.| Knowledge Unlatched
Open Access made simple with Knowledge Unlatched| Knowledge Unlatched
The post Oable incorporates all of Elsevier’s journals appeared first on Knowledge Unlatched.| Knowledge Unlatched
Here's why it’s such a great idea to start a journal, how to get started with a journaling habit, and what to write about!| Tami Creates
Update Nov 2022: This blog has now been superseded by new data up to 2021 which are available here In this blog I report on growth in MDPI journals from 2015-2020. It updates two previous blogs on …| Dan Brockington