Just spotted that the new issue of the Journal of electronic Publishing, Open Research for the Humanities and Social Sciences (Vol 29, Issue 1) is live. It’s got a mix of articles on open scholarship and the current tensions within open research, so check it out if you’re interested!
Articles in this issue:
- Open Research for the Humanities and Social Science: Editors’ Introduction – Jenni Adams, Miranda L Barnes and Samuel Moore
- Open for Debate: Situating Open Research for the Humanities in a Neoliberal Setting – Beatriz Barrocas Ferreira
- Doing Openness Otherwise: Democratization and OA Publishing in the HSS – Rebekka Kiesewetter
- Open at the Level of (Para)text: Critical Intertextuality and Discursive Notation as Open Research Practices in the Humanities – Jenni Adams
- A Prototyping Renaissance: Form, Content, and Scale in Open Publication in the Humanities – John W Maxwell and Alessandra Bordini
- What Does Openness Mean for the Humanities? Redefining Ethical and Reflexive Practices in Open Research – Adeola Eze
- Open Scholarship in the Humanities: An OA Author Intervention – Judith Fathallah
- Negotiating Openness under Authoritarian Risk: Feminist Open Data Sharing in Hong Kong – Lucas L.H. Wong and Tak-Yin Yumi Wong
- “Well, Parts of Linguistics Is Open…”: Insights into Linguists’ Diverse Understandings of Open Science – Elen Le Foll
- Open Practices, Closed Realities? Archaeological Perspectives on Open Research Practices – Claire Davin, Jess Beck and Lai Ma
- Tensions et zones d’ombre autour de la science ouverte en SHS en France – Ioanna Faïta
- The French HSS Community Speaks Out on Open Science: A Top-Down and Bottom-Up Taxonomy Approach – Candice Fillaud, Chérifa Boukacem-Zeghmouri, Yutong FEI and Valentine Favel-Kapoian
- Mobilizing Knowledge in the Humanities and Social Sciences: Exploring Competing Articulations of Openness in Policy and Practice – Corina MacDonald
- Do Infrastructures Have Epistemologies? Studying an Open Access Infrastructure for SSH from Within – Simon Dumas Primbault
- Open Infrastructure and the Threat of “Vanishing” Journals: Leveraging Open Knowledge Commons, Open Source Software, and DIY Solutions to Preserve Humanities and Social Sciences Research – Graham Jensen, Sajib Ghosh, Archie To and Ray Siemens
- Emerging Forms of Open Research in Social/Cultural Anthropology – Timothy Elfenbein, Marcel LaFlamme and Andrew S. Hoffman