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Open Library of Humanities
Open access academic publisher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Open Library of Humanities is a nonprofit, diamond open access publisher in the humanities and social sciences[1] founded by Martin Paul Eve and Caroline Edwards.[2] Founded in 2015, OLH published 27 scholarly journals as of 2022,[3] and as of 2025 lists 33 journals,[4] including a mega journal, also called Open Library of Humanities, which was modeled on PLOS but not affiliated with it.[5]
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History
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The Open Library of Humanities was officially launched on 28 September 2015.[6] The project was funded by core grants from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation[7][8] and uses a library partnership subsidy model to cover costs.[9] It has a number of advisory committees, such as the Academic Steering & Advocacy Committee which includes PLOS co-founder Michael Eisen,[1] Quebec-based academic Jean-Claude Guédon, and the Director of Scholarly Communication of the Modern Language Association, Kathleen Fitzpatrick.[10] An internationalization committee was formed in 2013 to develop an international strategy.[11] A member of this committee, Francisco Osorio, has written that the open access model of the Open Library of Humanities may be beneficial for researchers publishing in languages other than English.[12]
Although originally intended to run on Open Journal Systems,[13] in 2017 OLH started development of a new platform, Janeway.[14] Initially the main press site and the journal Orbit[15] were hosted on the new platform. In of March 2022 the project to migrate the remaining journals was completed.[16] The University of Lincoln, in partnership with the Public Knowledge Project, offered a funded place for an MSc by Research in Computer Science to develop an open-source XML typesetting tool as proposed by the Open Library of Humanities technical roadmap.[17] In November 2013 it was announced that the Public Knowledge Project will be funding the development of the typesetter, known as meTypeset.[18]
The Open Library of Humanities publishing model relies on support from an international group of libraries, which enables the publication of articles without the need for article processing charges.[19] In 2021, OLH became part of Birkbeck, University of London, maintaining its nonprofit status while reducing overhead.[20]
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Journals
- Open Library of Humanities
- 19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
- ASIANetwork Exchange
- Architectural Histories
- Body, Space & Technology
- C21 Literature: Journal of 21st-Century Writings
- The Comics Grid: Journal of Comics Scholarship
- Digital Medievalist
- Digital Studies / Le champ numérique
- Ethnologia Europaea
- Francosphères
- Genealogy+Critique
- Glossa: a journal of general linguistics
- International Journal of Welsh Writing in English
- International Labour Review
- Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry
- Journal of Embodied Research
- Journal of Portuguese Linguistics
- Laboratory Phonology
- Marvell Studies
- Open Screens
- Orbit: A Journal of American Literature
- Pynchon Notes
- Quaker Studies
- Studies in the Maternal
- Theoretical Roman Archaeology Journal
- Zeitschrift für Fantastikforschung
- The Parish Review: Journal of Flann O'Brien Studies
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