UCL Press partners with JSTOR
27 October 2016
UCL Press is delighted to announce a partnership with JSTOR to provide access to open access books on their widely used platform.
JSTOR is a leading digital library of academic journals, books, and primary sources used by academics and researchers worldwide. All titles will also be preserved in Portico, ensuring that they will be available to researchers in perpetuity.
The only UK publisher to be an inaugural partner in this programme, UCL Press titles are included in an initial set of open access books available from four leading university presses, including University of California Press, University of Michigan Press and Cornell University Press. Books published by UCL Press that will appear on JSTOR's widely used platform from Wednesday 26th October include:
- Biostratigraphic and Geological Significance of Planktonic Foraminifera
- Burning Bright: Essays in Honour of David Bindman
- Discord and Consensus in the Low Countries, 1700-2000
- Herman Gorter: Poems of 1890 A Selection
- How the World Changed Social Media
- Participatory Planning for Climate Compatible Development in Maputo, Mozambique
- Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology: Characters and Collections
- Social Media in an English Village
- Social Media in Industrial China
- Social Media in Northern Chile
- Social Media in Rural China
- Social Media in Southeast Turkey
- Suburban Urbanities: Suburbs and the Life of the High Street
- Temptation in the Archives: Essays in Golden Age Dutch Culture
- Textbook of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Treasures from UCL
The ebooks are freely available for anyone in the world to use and do not have DRM restrictions, nor do they have limits on chapter PDF downloads or printing. Users will not need to register or log in to JSTOR in order to access any of our titles. Free MARC records are available for librarians, who will also be able to activate the titles in discovery services; more information for librarians is available. The titles are also cross-searchable with other content on JSTOR.org.