Show
115 citations
related to Scholarly publishing
Show
115 citations
related to Scholarly publishing as a subject or category
Article
Kirsten Bell; Patricia Kingori; David Mills
(2024)
Scholarly Publishing, Boundary Processes, and the Problem of Fake Peer Reviews.
Science, Technology, and Human Values
(pp. 78-104).
(/isis/citation/CBB015775164/)
Article
Kirsten Bell; Patricia Kingori; David Mills
(January 2024)
Scholarly Publishing, Boundary Processes, and the Problem of Fake Peer Reviews.
Science, Technology, and Human Values
(pp. 78-104).
(/isis/citation/CBB476702594/)
Article
James Griesemer
(2023)
On lowering guardrails.
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society.
(/isis/citation/CBB845129450/)
Article
Dorien Daling
(2023)
“On the ruins of seriality”: The scientific journal and the nature of the scientific life.
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
(p. 100885).
(/isis/citation/CBB306388295/)
Article
Deepak Basyal; Brigitte Stenhouse
(2023)
Tikaram and Chandrakala Dhananjaya: A collaborative couple in mathematics from Nepal.
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
(p. 100899).
(/isis/citation/CBB477760811/)
Article
Marco Milanese
(2023)
Practicing and Publishing Post-1500 Mediterranean Archaeology in Italy, Spain, and France.
Historical Archaeology
(pp. 1110-1123).
(/isis/citation/CBB730220051/)
Article
Armel Cornu
(2023)
Senses and Utility in the New Chemistry.
Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry
(pp. 380-398).
(/isis/citation/CBB188406139/)
Article
Jessica M. Smith
(2023)
Language Matters: Writing for Engineering Studies.
Engineering Studies
(pp. 71-74).
(/isis/citation/CBB211429245/)
Article
Mario M. A. Wannier
(2023)
No Publication, No Fame: Reassessing Arnold Guyot’s (1807–1884) Pioneering Contributions to the Glacial Theory.
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
(pp. 123-159).
(/isis/citation/CBB790328362/)
Article
James T. Costa; George Beccaloni
(2023)
Alfred Russel Wallace's Unrealized Last Book: Insights from the Plan for Darwin and Wallace.
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
(pp. 367-402).
(/isis/citation/CBB954157068/)
Article
Subrata Dasgupta
(2023)
An intellectual history of P.C. Ray’s papers on the nitrites of mercury.
Indian Journal of History of Science
(pp. 20-28).
(/isis/citation/CBB130404884/)
Article
Wen-Ling Tu
(2023)
Welcome to Our Newly Renovated Open Kitchen!.
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
(pp. 3-5).
(/isis/citation/CBB046267046/)
Article
Jessica M. Smith
(2023)
Introduction to the New Editor-in-Chief.
Engineering Studies
(pp. 1-8).
(/isis/citation/CBB506881362/)
Article
Carmen J. Giunta; Martin D. Saltzman
(2023)
History of Chemistry in the Journal of Chemical Education.
Bulletin for the History of Chemistry
(pp. 100-108).
(/isis/citation/CBB658798984/)
Article
Timothy Neale; Kari Lancaster; Courtney Addison; et al.
(2023)
What Is an STS Contribution Now?.
Science, Technology, and Human Values
(pp. 3-8).
(/isis/citation/CBB313160182/)
Chapter
Elizabethanne Boran; Anna Marie Roos; Gideon Manning
(2023)
Science in Trinity College Dublin in the Seventeenth Century.
In: Collected Wisdom of the Early Modern Scholar: Essays in Honor of Mordechai Feingold
(pp. 101-131).
(/isis/citation/CBB646330088/)
Article
Dinah Pfau; Helen Piel; Florian Müller; et al.
(2023)
The “KI-Rundbrief,” Its Editors, and Its Community: A Perspective on West German AI, 1975–1987.
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
(pp. 48-65).
(/isis/citation/CBB303995021/)
Article
Camilo López-Aguirre; Diana Farías
(2022)
The mirage of scientific productivity and how women are left behind: The Colombian case.
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society.
(/isis/citation/CBB389058641/)
Article
Leandro Rodriguez Medina; Vivette García Deister
(2022)
A transitional editorial about editorial transition.
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
(p. 2012959).
(/isis/citation/CBB866424994/)
Article
Mariano Zukerfeld; Santiago Liaudat; María Sol Terlizzi; et al.
(2022)
A specter is haunting science, the specter of piracy. A case study on the use of illegal routes of access to scientific literature by Argentinean researchers.
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society.
(/isis/citation/CBB943097233/)
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