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A university press is an academic publishing house specializing in monographs and scholarly journals. They are often an integral component of a large research university. They publish work that has been reviewed by scholars in the field. They produce mainly academic works but also often have trade books for a lay audience. These trade books also get peer reviewed. Many but not all university presses are nonprofit organizations, including the 160 members of the Association of University Presses.
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Because scholarly books are mostly unprofitable, university presses may also publish textbooks and reference works, which tend to have larger audiences and sell more copies. Most university presses operate at a loss and are subsidized by their owners; others are required to break even. Demand has fallen as library budgets are cut and the online sales of used books undercut the new book market. Many presses are experimenting with electronic publishing.
History
Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press are the two oldest and largest university presses in the world. They have scores of branches around the world, especially throughout the Commonwealth of Nations.
In the United States, colonial colleges required printers to publish university catalogs, ceremonial materials, and a limited number of scholarly publications. Following the 17th-century work of Harvard College printer Samuel Green, William Hilliard of Cambridge, Massachusetts, began publishing materials under the name "University Press" in 1802. Modern university presses emerged in the United States in the late 19th century. Cornell University started one in 1869 but had to close it down, only restarting operations in 1930; Johns Hopkins University Press has been in continuous operation since 1878. The University of Pennsylvania Press (1890), University of Chicago Press (1891), Columbia University Press (1893), University of California Press (1893), and Northwestern University Press (1893) followed.
The biggest growth came after 1945 as higher education expanded rapidly. There was a leveling off after 1970.
Asia
By the time of independence in 1947, India had a well-established system of universities, and several leading ones developed a university press. The main areas of activity include monographs by professors, research papers and theses, and textbooks for undergraduate use. However, the basic problem faced by scholarly publishers in India is the use of multiple languages, which splintered and reduced the base of potential sales.
Africa
Oxford University Press opened a South African office in 1915 to distribute its books in the region. The first South African university press was established in 1922 at Witwatersrand University. Several other South African universities established presses during the 20th century and, as of 2015, four were actively publishing. As new universities opened in Africa after 1960, some developed a press based on the European model. In Nigeria for example, scholarly presses have played a central role in shaping and encouraging intellectual efforts and gaining international attention for scholarly production. However, the established European presses, especially Oxford University Press, have dominated the market, allowing a narrow niche for new local presses such as Ibadan University Press, now University Press Plc.
Europe
In England, Cambridge University Press traces its founding to 1534, when King Henry VIII granted the university a "letters patent", giving it the right to print its own books, and its active publishing program to 1584. Oxford University began publishing books the following year in 1585 and acquired a charter in 1632.
In Scotland Archie Turnbull (1923-2003) served as the long-time director of the Edinburgh University Press, 1952-87. The British university presses had strong expansion in the 1950s and 1960s. The Edinburgh University Press became the leading Scottish academic publisher. It was especially famous for publishing major books on the history and literature of Scotland, and by enlisting others in Scotland.
Oceania
In Australia, the University of Melbourne was the first to establish its own press: Melbourne University Press, set up to sell books and stationery in 1922, began publishing academic monographs soon after and is the second-oldest publishing house in Australia. Other Australian universities followed suit in following decades, including the University of Western Australia Press (1935), University of Queensland Press (1948) and Sydney University Press (1962). In the later part of the 20th century some of these presses closed down or were taken over by larger international presses. Some survived and built strong reputations for publishing literature, poetry and serious non-fiction. In the 21st century several Australian universities have revived their presses or established new ones. Their business models and publishing approaches vary considerably. Some publish chiefly for general readers while others publish only scholarly books. Several have experimented with Open Access publishing and/or electronic-only publishing. Some supplement their publishing income by offering distribution services or operating bookshops. In January 2019 Melbourne University Press announced a plan to focus increasingly on scholarly books rather than the commercial successes it had become known for, prompting a public debate about the role of university presses.
In New Zealand, several universities operate scholarly presses. Auckland University Press has been operating since 1966 and Victoria University Press since the 1970s.
North America
The Association of Presses (AUP)
In 2023, the Association of University Presses (AUP) has over 150 member presses. Growth has been sporadic, with 14 presses established in the 1940s, 11 in the 1950s; and 19 in the 1960s. Since 1970, 16 universities have opened presses and several have closed. Today, the largest university press in the United States is the University of Chicago Press. University presses tend to develop specialized areas of expertise, such as regional studies. For instance, Yale University Press publishes many art books, the Chicago, Duke, and Indiana University Presses publish many academic journals, the University of Illinois Press specializes in labor history, MIT Press publishes linguistics and architecture titles, Northwestern University Press publishes in continental philosophy, poetry, and the performing arts, and the Catholic University of America Press publishes works that deal with Catholic theology, philosophy, and church history.
Chicago Distribution Center
The Distribution Services Division provides the University of Chicago Press's warehousing, customer service, and related services. The Chicago Distribution Center (CDC) began providing distribution services in 1991, when the University of Tennessee Press became its first client. Currently the CDC serves nearly 100 publishers including Stanford University Press, University of Minnesota Press, University of Iowa Press, Temple University Press, Northwestern University Press, and many others. Since 2001, with development funding from the Mellon Foundation, the Chicago Digital Distribution Center (CDDC) has been offering digital printing services and the BiblioVault digital repository services to book publishers. In 2009, the CDC enabled the sales of electronic books directly to individuals and provided digital delivery services for the University of Michigan Press among others. The Chicago Distribution Center has also partnered with an additional 15 presses including the University of Missouri Press, West Virginia University Press, and publications of the Getty Foundation.
Recent developments
Financial pressures
Financially, university presses have come under growing pressure. Only a few presses, such as Oxford, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale have endowments; the others depend upon sales, fundraising, and subventions (subsidies) from their sponsoring institutions. Subsidies vary but typically range from $150,000 to $500,000. Because the subsidies are often not indexed to inflation, university press operating budgets can face a functional squeeze as inflation chips away at the value of the subsidy. Operating models vary, but host universities generally cover fixed costs like labor and fixed assets, while looking to the press to cover variable costs from the sale of books and other revenue. Sales of academic books have been declining, however, especially as University libraries cut back their purchases. At Princeton University Press in the 1960s, a typical hardcover monograph would sell 1,660 copies in the five years after publication. By 1984, that average had declined to 1,003 and in after 2000 typical sales of monographs for all presses are below 500. University libraries are under heavy pressure to purchase very expensive subscriptions to commercial science journals, even as their overall budgets are static. By 1997 scientific journals were thirty times more expensive than they were in 1970.
In May 2012, the University of Missouri System announced that it would close the University of Missouri Press so that it might focus more efficiently on “strategic priorities.” Friends of the press from around the country rallied to its support, arguing that by publishing over 2,000 scholarly books the press made a major contribution to scholarship. A few months later the university reversed its decision.
In 2014, Peter Berkery, the executive director of the Association of University Presses stated:
- University presses are experiencing new, acute and, in some ways, existential pressures, largely from changes occurring in the academy and the technology juggernaut. Random House can see the technology threat and they can throw some substantial resources at it. The press at a small land-grant university doesn’t have the same ability to respond.
New university presses
In the late 2010s, a number of universities began launching initiatives, often under the aegis of their libraries, to "support the creation, dissemination, and curation of scholarly, creative, and/or educational works" in a way that emulated the approach of traditional university presses while also taking into account the changing landscape of scholarly publishing. These initiatives have collectively been dubbed "new university presses", which the "Open-Access Toolkit", published by the OAPEN Foundation, defines as follows:
These are university presses established since the 1990s, often explicitly to publish open access books. In many other respects, they are run like a university press. However, as with library publishing ... NUPs are often library-led, albeit with an academic-led steering group or editorial board.
Examples of NUPs include ANU Press (Australia), Amherst College Press (USA), University of Michigan Press (USA), UCL Press (UK), and the University of Huddersfield Press (UK).
Notes
- First known as the University Publication Agency, it was renamed the Johns Hopkins Press in 1891.
See also
- Library publishing
- List of university presses
References
- "About us | Our story | Timeline". www.cambridge.org/universitypress. Retrieved 2024-05-10.
- Grady, Constance (November 8, 2019). "75 books from university presses that will help you understand the world". Vox. Retrieved December 13, 2020.
- Windhorn, Annette. "ABOUT THE ASSOCIATION". AUPresses.org. Association of University Presses. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
- Kathleen Fitzpatrick (2011). Planned Obsolescence: Publishing, Technology, and the Future of the Academy. NYU Press. p. 157. ISBN 9780814728963.
- Rebecca Ann Bartlett, "University Press Forum 2011: The End of the Tunnel?" Journal of Scholarly Publishing (Oct 2011) 43#1 pp 1-13 DOI: 10.1353/scp.2011.0040
- White, Norman Hill (1920). "Printing in Cambridge Since 1800". Proceedings of the Cambridge Historical Society. 15. Cambridge Historical Society: 16–23. Retrieved 20 April 2015.
- Jagodzinski, Cecile M. (October 2008). "The University Press in North America: A Brief History". Journal of Scholarly Publishing. 40 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1353/scp.0.0022. S2CID 144155976.
- Jeff Camhi (15 April 2013). A Dam in the River: Releasing the Flow of University Ideas. Algora Publishing. p. 149. ISBN 978-0-87586-989-6.
- Kerr, 1949
- S. Kanjilal, "The University Press in India," Scholarly Publishing (1972), Vol. 4 Issue 1, p73-80
- Le Roux, Elizabeth (2015-11-18). A Social History of the University Presses in Apartheid South Africa: Between Complicity and Resistance. Boston: Brill. p. 5. ISBN 9789004293489. OCLC 923808810.
- Armstrong, Robert Plant. "The University Press in a Developing Country," Scholarly Publishing (1973) Vol 5, #1. pp 35-40.
- Udoeyop, N J. "Scholarly Publishing in Nigeria," Scholarly Publishing (1972) Vol 4, #1. pp 51-60.
- Black, Michael H. (1984). Cambridge University Press, 1584-1984. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521264731. OCLC 10348660.
- Alistair McCleery and David Finkelstein, "Archie Turnbull and Edinburgh University Press," Journal of Scholarly Publishing (2005) 37#1 pp 33-47.
- Munro, Craig; Sheahan-Bright, Robyn, eds. (2006). Paper Empires: A History of the Book in Australia, 1946-2005. St Lucia, Qld.: University of Queensland Press. p. 329. ISBN 9780702242120. OCLC 700204992.
- Mrva-Montoya, Agata (2017). "Las editoriales universitarias: una visión australiana" [University Presses: An Australian Perspective] (PDF). Contraportada (in Spanish). 1. ISSN 2539-0414.
- "Collegial but competitive, university presses are still going strong". Inside Story. 2019-02-07. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
- Bongiorno, Frank (2019-02-07). "On Louise Adler, academic publishing and cultural barbarism". The Monthly. Retrieved 2019-05-09.
- "Our Members". Association of University Presses. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
- Jagodzinski, "The University Press in North America," p. 4
- "The University of Chicago Press Selects Rightslink(R) For Online Copyright Permissions". Business Wire. February 5, 2007. Retrieved 2009-10-21.
- Scott Sherman, 2014 p 20
- Dalton, p 259
- John B. Thompson (2013). Books in the Digital Age: The Transformation of Academic and Higher Education Publishing in Britain and the United States. John Wiley & Sons. p. 99. ISBN 9780745683263.
- Sherman, 2014 pp 19-20
- Adema, Janneke; Stone, Graham (2017). Changing Publishing Ecologies: A Landscape Study of New University Presses and Academic-Led Publishing (PDF). Bristol, United Kingdom: Jisc. p. 4. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
- MacKay, Caroline (September 26, 2019). "A New Generation of University Presses Is Changing Academic Publishing". Wonkhe. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
- "(New) University Presses". OAPEN. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
- Adema, Janneke; Stone, Graham (2017). "The Surge in New University Presses and Academic- Led Publishing: An Overview of a Changing Publishing Ecology in the UK". LIBER Quarterly. 27 (1): 97–126. doi:10.18352/lq.10210. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
Further reading
- Abadía, Adolfo A. (2023). "Co-authorship Networks and Scholarly Books: A Methodological Approach from a University Press Case Study". Revista CS (40): 101–140. doi:10.18046/recs.i40.5858. eISSN 2665-4814. ISSN 2011-0324. S2CID 262165048.
- Case, Mary, ed. The Specialized Scholarly Monograph in Crisis, Or, How Can I Get Tenure If You Won’t Publish My Book? (Washington: Association of Research Libraries, 1999)
- Dalton, Margaret Stieg. "A system destabilized: scholarly books today." Journal of Scholarly Publishing (2006) 37#4 pp: 251–269. online
- Davidson, Cathy. "Understanding the Economic Burden of Scholarly Publishing," Chronicle of Higher Education (3 October 2003): B7–B10, online
- Davidson, Cathy. "The Futures of Scholarly Publishing," Journal of Scholarly Publishing (2004) 35#3 pp: 129–42
- Hawes, Gene R. To Advance Knowledge: A Handbook on American University Press Publishing (New York: American University Press Services 1967)
- Kerr, Chester. A Report on American University Presses (Washington: Association of American University Presses, 1949)
- Le Roux, Elizabeth. A Social History of the University Presses in Apartheid South Africa: Between Complicity and Resistance (Leiden: Brill, 2015), ISBN 9789004293472
- Oliva, Kathia Salomé Ibacache, Javier Munoz-Diaz, Caitlin M. Berry, and Eric A. Vance. 2020. “Forgotten Hispano-American Literature: Representation of Hispano-American Presses in Academic Libraries.” College & Research Libraries 81 (6): 928–44.
- Sherman, Scott. "University Presses Under Fire: How the Internet and slashed budgets have endangered one of higher education’s most important institutions," The Nation (May 26, 2014) online
- Thatcher, Sanford G. "From the University Presses--The Hidden Digital Revolution in Scholarly Publishing: POD, SRDP, the" Long Tail," and Open Access." Against the Grain 21.2 (2013): 33. online
- Thatcher, Sanford G. "The 'Value Added' in Editorial Acquisitions." Journal of Scholarly Publishing 30 (1999): 59-74.
Individual presses
- Black, M. H. Cambridge University Press, 1584–1984. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1984. 343pp.
- McKitterick, David. History of Cambridge University Press. Vol. 3: New Worlds for Learning, 1873–1972. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 2004. 513pp.
- Sutcliffe, Peter. The Oxford University Press: An Informal History. Oxford, England: The Clarendon Press of Oxford University Press, 1978. 303pp.
A university press is an academic publishing house specializing in monographs and scholarly journals They are often an integral component of a large research university They publish work that has been reviewed by scholars in the field They produce mainly academic works but also often have trade books for a lay audience These trade books also get peer reviewed Many but not all university presses are nonprofit organizations including the 160 members of the Association of University Presses The Pitt Building at the University of Cambridge in Cambridge England was built in 1833 and is home of Cambridge University Press the world s oldest university press Because scholarly books are mostly unprofitable university presses may also publish textbooks and reference works which tend to have larger audiences and sell more copies Most university presses operate at a loss and are subsidized by their owners others are required to break even Demand has fallen as library budgets are cut and the online sales of used books undercut the new book market Many presses are experimenting with electronic publishing HistoryCambridge University Press and Oxford University Press are the two oldest and largest university presses in the world They have scores of branches around the world especially throughout the Commonwealth of Nations In the United States colonial colleges required printers to publish university catalogs ceremonial materials and a limited number of scholarly publications Following the 17th century work of Harvard College printer Samuel Green William Hilliard of Cambridge Massachusetts began publishing materials under the name University Press in 1802 Modern university presses emerged in the United States in the late 19th century Cornell University started one in 1869 but had to close it down only restarting operations in 1930 Johns Hopkins University Press has been in continuous operation since 1878 The University of Pennsylvania Press 1890 University of Chicago Press 1891 Columbia University Press 1893 University of California Press 1893 and Northwestern University Press 1893 followed The biggest growth came after 1945 as higher education expanded rapidly There was a leveling off after 1970 Asia By the time of independence in 1947 India had a well established system of universities and several leading ones developed a university press The main areas of activity include monographs by professors research papers and theses and textbooks for undergraduate use However the basic problem faced by scholarly publishers in India is the use of multiple languages which splintered and reduced the base of potential sales Africa Oxford University Press opened a South African office in 1915 to distribute its books in the region The first South African university press was established in 1922 at Witwatersrand University Several other South African universities established presses during the 20th century and as of 2015 four were actively publishing As new universities opened in Africa after 1960 some developed a press based on the European model In Nigeria for example scholarly presses have played a central role in shaping and encouraging intellectual efforts and gaining international attention for scholarly production However the established European presses especially Oxford University Press have dominated the market allowing a narrow niche for new local presses such as Ibadan University Press now University Press Plc Europe In England Cambridge University Press traces its founding to 1534 when King Henry VIII granted the university a letters patent giving it the right to print its own books and its active publishing program to 1584 Oxford University began publishing books the following year in 1585 and acquired a charter in 1632 In Scotland Archie Turnbull 1923 2003 served as the long time director of the Edinburgh University Press 1952 87 The British university presses had strong expansion in the 1950s and 1960s The Edinburgh University Press became the leading Scottish academic publisher It was especially famous for publishing major books on the history and literature of Scotland and by enlisting others in Scotland Oceania In Australia the University of Melbourne was the first to establish its own press Melbourne University Press set up to sell books and stationery in 1922 began publishing academic monographs soon after and is the second oldest publishing house in Australia Other Australian universities followed suit in following decades including the University of Western Australia Press 1935 University of Queensland Press 1948 and Sydney University Press 1962 In the later part of the 20th century some of these presses closed down or were taken over by larger international presses Some survived and built strong reputations for publishing literature poetry and serious non fiction In the 21st century several Australian universities have revived their presses or established new ones Their business models and publishing approaches vary considerably Some publish chiefly for general readers while others publish only scholarly books Several have experimented with Open Access publishing and or electronic only publishing Some supplement their publishing income by offering distribution services or operating bookshops In January 2019 Melbourne University Press announced a plan to focus increasingly on scholarly books rather than the commercial successes it had become known for prompting a public debate about the role of university presses In New Zealand several universities operate scholarly presses Auckland University Press has been operating since 1966 and Victoria University Press since the 1970s North America The Association of Presses AUP In 2023 the Association of University Presses AUP has over 150 member presses Growth has been sporadic with 14 presses established in the 1940s 11 in the 1950s and 19 in the 1960s Since 1970 16 universities have opened presses and several have closed Today the largest university press in the United States is the University of Chicago Press University presses tend to develop specialized areas of expertise such as regional studies For instance Yale University Press publishes many art books the Chicago Duke and Indiana University Presses publish many academic journals the University of Illinois Press specializes in labor history MIT Press publishes linguistics and architecture titles Northwestern University Press publishes in continental philosophy poetry and the performing arts and the Catholic University of America Press publishes works that deal with Catholic theology philosophy and church history Chicago Distribution Center The Distribution Services Division provides the University of Chicago Press s warehousing customer service and related services The Chicago Distribution Center CDC began providing distribution services in 1991 when the University of Tennessee Press became its first client Currently the CDC serves nearly 100 publishers including Stanford University Press University of Minnesota Press University of Iowa Press Temple University Press Northwestern University Press and many others Since 2001 with development funding from the Mellon Foundation the Chicago Digital Distribution Center CDDC has been offering digital printing services and the BiblioVault digital repository services to book publishers In 2009 the CDC enabled the sales of electronic books directly to individuals and provided digital delivery services for the University of Michigan Press among others The Chicago Distribution Center has also partnered with an additional 15 presses including the University of Missouri Press West Virginia University Press and publications of the Getty Foundation Recent developmentsFinancial pressures Financially university presses have come under growing pressure Only a few presses such as Oxford Harvard Princeton and Yale have endowments the others depend upon sales fundraising and subventions subsidies from their sponsoring institutions Subsidies vary but typically range from 150 000 to 500 000 Because the subsidies are often not indexed to inflation university press operating budgets can face a functional squeeze as inflation chips away at the value of the subsidy Operating models vary but host universities generally cover fixed costs like labor and fixed assets while looking to the press to cover variable costs from the sale of books and other revenue Sales of academic books have been declining however especially as University libraries cut back their purchases At Princeton University Press in the 1960s a typical hardcover monograph would sell 1 660 copies in the five years after publication By 1984 that average had declined to 1 003 and in after 2000 typical sales of monographs for all presses are below 500 University libraries are under heavy pressure to purchase very expensive subscriptions to commercial science journals even as their overall budgets are static By 1997 scientific journals were thirty times more expensive than they were in 1970 In May 2012 the University of Missouri System announced that it would close the University of Missouri Press so that it might focus more efficiently on strategic priorities Friends of the press from around the country rallied to its support arguing that by publishing over 2 000 scholarly books the press made a major contribution to scholarship A few months later the university reversed its decision In 2014 Peter Berkery the executive director of the Association of University Presses stated University presses are experiencing new acute and in some ways existential pressures largely from changes occurring in the academy and the technology juggernaut Random House can see the technology threat and they can throw some substantial resources at it The press at a small land grant university doesn t have the same ability to respond New university presses In the late 2010s a number of universities began launching initiatives often under the aegis of their libraries to support the creation dissemination and curation of scholarly creative and or educational works in a way that emulated the approach of traditional university presses while also taking into account the changing landscape of scholarly publishing These initiatives have collectively been dubbed new university presses which the Open Access Toolkit published by the OAPEN Foundation defines as follows These are university presses established since the 1990s often explicitly to publish open access books In many other respects they are run like a university press However as with library publishing NUPs are often library led albeit with an academic led steering group or editorial board Examples of NUPs include ANU Press Australia Amherst College Press USA University of Michigan Press USA UCL Press UK and the University of Huddersfield Press UK NotesFirst known as the University Publication Agency it was renamed the Johns Hopkins Press in 1891 See alsoLibrary publishing List of university pressesReferences About us Our story Timeline www cambridge org universitypress Retrieved 2024 05 10 Grady Constance November 8 2019 75 books from university presses that will help you understand the world Vox Retrieved December 13 2020 Windhorn Annette ABOUT THE ASSOCIATION AUPresses org Association of University Presses Retrieved 7 December 2023 Kathleen Fitzpatrick 2011 Planned Obsolescence Publishing Technology and the Future of the Academy NYU Press p 157 ISBN 9780814728963 Rebecca Ann Bartlett University Press Forum 2011 The End of the Tunnel Journal of Scholarly Publishing Oct 2011 43 1 pp 1 13 DOI 10 1353 scp 2011 0040 White Norman Hill 1920 Printing in Cambridge Since 1800 Proceedings of the Cambridge Historical Society 15 Cambridge Historical Society 16 23 Retrieved 20 April 2015 Jagodzinski Cecile M October 2008 The University Press in North America A Brief History Journal of Scholarly Publishing 40 1 1 20 doi 10 1353 scp 0 0022 S2CID 144155976 Jeff Camhi 15 April 2013 A Dam in the River Releasing the Flow of University Ideas Algora Publishing p 149 ISBN 978 0 87586 989 6 Kerr 1949 S Kanjilal The University Press in India Scholarly Publishing 1972 Vol 4 Issue 1 p73 80 Le Roux Elizabeth 2015 11 18 A Social History of the University Presses in Apartheid South Africa Between Complicity and Resistance Boston Brill p 5 ISBN 9789004293489 OCLC 923808810 Armstrong Robert Plant The University Press in a Developing Country Scholarly Publishing 1973 Vol 5 1 pp 35 40 Udoeyop N J Scholarly Publishing in Nigeria Scholarly Publishing 1972 Vol 4 1 pp 51 60 Black Michael H 1984 Cambridge University Press 1584 1984 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521264731 OCLC 10348660 Alistair McCleery and David Finkelstein Archie Turnbull and Edinburgh University Press Journal of Scholarly Publishing 2005 37 1 pp 33 47 Munro Craig Sheahan Bright Robyn eds 2006 Paper Empires A History of the Book in Australia 1946 2005 St Lucia Qld University of Queensland Press p 329 ISBN 9780702242120 OCLC 700204992 Mrva Montoya Agata 2017 Las editoriales universitarias una vision australiana University Presses An Australian Perspective PDF Contraportada in Spanish 1 ISSN 2539 0414 Collegial but competitive university presses are still going strong Inside Story 2019 02 07 Retrieved 2019 05 09 Bongiorno Frank 2019 02 07 On Louise Adler academic publishing and cultural barbarism The Monthly Retrieved 2019 05 09 Our Members Association of University Presses Retrieved March 4 2023 Jagodzinski The University Press in North America p 4 The University of Chicago Press Selects Rightslink R For Online Copyright Permissions Business Wire February 5 2007 Retrieved 2009 10 21 Scott Sherman 2014 p 20 Dalton p 259 John B Thompson 2013 Books in the Digital Age The Transformation of Academic and Higher Education Publishing in Britain and the United States John Wiley amp Sons p 99 ISBN 9780745683263 Sherman 2014 pp 19 20 Adema Janneke Stone Graham 2017 Changing Publishing Ecologies A Landscape Study of New University Presses and Academic Led Publishing PDF Bristol United Kingdom Jisc p 4 Retrieved March 4 2023 MacKay Caroline September 26 2019 A New Generation of University Presses Is Changing Academic Publishing Wonkhe Retrieved March 4 2023 New University Presses OAPEN Retrieved March 4 2023 Adema Janneke Stone Graham 2017 The Surge in New University Presses and Academic Led Publishing An Overview of a Changing Publishing Ecology in the UK LIBER Quarterly 27 1 97 126 doi 10 18352 lq 10210 Retrieved March 4 2023 Further readingAbadia Adolfo A 2023 Co authorship Networks and Scholarly Books A Methodological Approach from a University Press Case Study Revista CS 40 101 140 doi 10 18046 recs i40 5858 eISSN 2665 4814 ISSN 2011 0324 S2CID 262165048 Case Mary ed The Specialized Scholarly Monograph in Crisis Or How Can I Get Tenure If You Won t Publish My Book Washington Association of Research Libraries 1999 Dalton Margaret Stieg A system destabilized scholarly books today Journal of Scholarly Publishing 2006 37 4 pp 251 269 online Davidson Cathy Understanding the Economic Burden of Scholarly Publishing Chronicle of Higher Education 3 October 2003 B7 B10 online Davidson Cathy The Futures of Scholarly Publishing Journal of Scholarly Publishing 2004 35 3 pp 129 42 Hawes Gene R To Advance Knowledge A Handbook on American University Press Publishing New York American University Press Services 1967 Kerr Chester A Report on American University Presses Washington Association of American University Presses 1949 Le Roux Elizabeth A Social History of the University Presses in Apartheid South Africa Between Complicity and Resistance Leiden Brill 2015 ISBN 9789004293472 Oliva Kathia Salome Ibacache Javier Munoz Diaz Caitlin M Berry and Eric A Vance 2020 Forgotten Hispano American Literature Representation of Hispano American Presses in Academic Libraries College amp Research Libraries 81 6 928 44 Sherman Scott University Presses Under Fire How the Internet and slashed budgets have endangered one of higher education s most important institutions The Nation May 26 2014 online Thatcher Sanford G From the University Presses The Hidden Digital Revolution in Scholarly Publishing POD SRDP the Long Tail and Open Access Against the Grain 21 2 2013 33 online Thatcher Sanford G The Value Added in Editorial Acquisitions Journal of Scholarly Publishing 30 1999 59 74 Individual presses Black M H Cambridge University Press 1584 1984 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press 1984 343pp McKitterick David History of Cambridge University Press Vol 3 New Worlds for Learning 1873 1972 Cambridge England Cambridge University Press 2004 513pp Sutcliffe Peter The Oxford University Press An Informal History Oxford England The Clarendon Press of Oxford University Press 1978 303pp