INNOVATIV
Band 79: Janet Wagner Band 78: Philip Franklin Orr Band 77: Carina Dony Band 76:
Linda Freyberg
Sabine Wolf (Hrsg.)
Band 75: Denise Rudolph Band 74: Sophia Paplowski Band 73: Carmen Krause Band 72:
Katrin Toetzke
Dirk Wissen
Band 71: Rahel Zoller Band 70: Sabrina Lorenz Band 69: Jennifer Hale Band 68:
Linda Schünhoff
Benjamin Flämig
Band 67:
Wilfried Sühl-Strohmenger
Jan-Pieter Barbian
Band 66: Tina Schurig Band 65: Christine Niehoff Band 64: Eva May Band 63: Eva Bunge Band 62: Nathalie Hild Band 61: Martina Haller Band 60: Leonie Flachsmann Band 59: Susanne Göttker Band 58: Georg Ruppelt Band 57: Karin Holste-Flinspach Band 56: Rafael Ball Band 55: Bettina Schröder Band 54: Florian Hagen Band 53: Anthea Zöller Band 52: Ursula Georgy Band 51: Ursula Jaksch Band 50: Hermann Rösch (Hrsg) Band 49: Lisa Maria Geisler Band 48: Raphaela Schneider Band 47: Eike Kleiner
Bestellen Sie jetzt online!
13. Mai 2026
  WEITERE NEWS
Aktuelles aus
L
ibrary
Essentials

In der Ausgabe 04/2026 (Mai 2026) lesen Sie u.a.:

  • Wie verlässlich sind Metadaten für Forschungsdaten wirklich?
  • Erfundene Quellen – wie KI-Zitationen die Wissenschaft unter Druck setzen
  • Zwischen Bildschirmzeit, Stress und Lernverlust
  • Warum Bibliotheken im Zeitalter von KI wichtiger werden und mit einem Vertrauensparadox zu kämpfen haben
  • Schweden setzt in Schulen wieder auf Bücher
  • Warum KI-Kompetenz mehr sein muss als Toolwissen
  • Wie stark KI-Texte das Netz schon prägen
  • Open Access bringt Vorteile, aber nicht in jedem Fach auf die gleiche Weise
  • Was ChatGPT und Ghostwriting über Autorschaft verraten
  • Warum E-Books in US-Schulen zur Kostenfrage werden
u.v.m.
  fachbuchjournal
2009 bis 2023

JULAC and Taylor & Francis sign open access agreement
to boost the impact of Hong Kong research

First Taylor & Francis partnership with Hong Kong’s university library consortium
supports open access publishing and global research sharing

Researchers in Hong Kong will have greater opportunities to share their work with a global audience through a new open access (OA) agreement between the Joint University Librarians Advisory Committee (JULAC) and Taylor & Francis.

The three-year agreement enables researchers at all participating institutions to publish OA articles in over 2,000 Taylor & Francis and Routledge Open Select (hybrid) journals without payment of an OA article publishing charge. Articles will be open on publication and free to access and reuse for readers around the world, broadening the reach of Hong Kong’s research.

Research fields with otherwise limited funding for OA publishing will receive a particular boost from the partnership, especially the Humanities and Social Sciences where Taylor & Francis is a leading global publisher. Additionally, the agreement ensures that faculty and students at participating universities retain access to Taylor & Francis’ extensive journal portfolio.

Beyond enhancing the visibility of Hong Kong’s research, this first OA agreement between Taylor & Francis and JULAC aims to streamline institutional support for OA publishing. Librarians at participating universities will gain access to insights and reports via the Taylor & Francis OA Dashboard, operational assistance, and on-demand training.

“As made clear in JULAC’s Position Statement on Open Scholarship, JULAC is committed to enabling open access to research publications. This agreement with Taylor & Francis is an example of the tangible support that libraries can provide to their institution’s researchers in making their work OA,” said Sidney Cheng, JULAC Chair and University Librarian, The Education University of Hong Kong.

Ian Jones, VP and Commercial Lead at Taylor & Francis, said: “Hong Kong’s institutions and researchers have long championed OA and its ability to drive global impact. This new agreement developed in collaboration with our partners at JULAC will enable the publication of hundreds more OA articles every year, ensuring readers everywhere can benefit from Hong Kong’s world-class research.”

https://taylorandfrancis.com/