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. Juli 2025
  WEITERE NEWS
Aktuelles aus
L
ibrary
Essentials

In der Ausgabe 4/2025 (Juni 2025) lesen Sie u.a.:

  • Neue Anforderungen an Führungs­kompetenz in wissenschaftlichen Bibliotheken
  • KI in der Katalogisierung: Drei Chatbots auf dem Prüfstand
  • Mehr als nur eine ID: Warum Forscher ORCID nutzen und warum nicht
  • Anxiety in der Hochschullehre: zögerlicher Einsatz von ChatGPT
  • Smart Reading in Bibliotheken: Aktive Beteiligung von Leser:innen
  • Kinder im digitalen Zeitalter:
    OECD-Bericht zeigt Handlungsbedarf für Politik und Bildungseinrichtungen
  • Bibliotheken und ihre Rolle beim Klimaschutz
  • Initiative für eine unabhängige Infrastruktur biomedizinischer Literatur –
    ZB MED entwickelt PubMed Alternative
  • Leiterin der Library Of Congress entlassen
  • Data Citations –
    Datenauswertung in Bibliotheken
  • Unternehmen investieren gezielt
    in künstliche Intelligenz
  • Springer Nature spendet KI-Werkzeug „Geppetto“ an die Verlagsbranche zur Bekämpfung betrügerischer Einreichungen
  • Die San José State University
    setzt auf Ihren ersten KI-Bibliothekar
u.v.m.
  fachbuchjournal

De Gruyter and Brill to create leading academic publisher
in the Humanities

The transaction creates the leading academic publisher in the Humanities and presents a unique opportunity to accelerate organic growth and achieve necessary scale. With pro forma combined revenues of around EUR 134 million and 750 employees, De Gruyter Brill will be well-positioned to offer the best possible service and infrastructure to its communities, jointly publishing well over 3,500 books and 800 journals per year.

The enlarged scale will accelerate the transition to new business models such as open access and finance investments in technology for end-to-end workflows and a state-of-the-art market-facing (content) platform. It will enable the company to further improve the author experience as well as services to libraries and institutions worldwide, better face market challenges, allow more effective sales and marketing, and increase the ability to attract and retain talent. The strategic rationale is underpinned by both companies’ complementary publishing programs and similar cultural values. De Gruyter and Brill are deeply rooted in the academic community, with long traditions and a shared commitment to publishing excellent research as trusted partners of scholars.

The combination of two centuries-old publishing houses will be branded De Gruyter Brill, signaling the importance of the strong heritage and family background of both companies. Upon the closing of the transaction, De Gruyter Brill headquarters will be in Berlin, Germany, while Brill’s office in Leiden, the Netherlands, will be the second largest office of the new combination and will continue to have material substance, both in number of people and in terms of responsibilities. De Gruyter’s shareholders are dedicated to ensuring the new combination stays independent for many more centuries to come.

www.degruyter.com