Scholarly Publishing

Tips for how to choose a journal to publish in, open access journals, pitfalls to avoid

Making a start

At the beginning of your academic publishing career, the choices you make about where you submit for work for publication, may enhance your long term academic reputation. Submit your work for publication to reputable; peer reviewed; academic journals or conferences, which target your specific discipline. Informal networks, i.e. your supervisor/s; research colleagues; and members of learned societies, are a good place for advice.

Think Check Submit opens in a new window provides a checklist of steps researchers may use to assess the credentials of a journal or publisher.

The Committee on Publication Ethics opens in a new window has developed The Core Practices opens in a new window to provide criteria to assess the bona fides of scholarly open-access publishers and journal titles.

The Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association (OASPA) has published the 3rd edition of Principles of Transparency and Best Practice in Scholarly Publishing opens in a new window. It provides 16 points of what they look for when assessing the quality of a publication.

Getting published

So you want people to read your thesis opens in a new window reviews the hurdles of converting your thesis into a book and warns against 'rogue' publishers.

CQUniversity thesis are available via our institutional repository, aCQUIRe, which is harvested by Google Scholar and TROVE.

Read the Author information on journal websites to find out what the editors expect from you when you submit articles for publication.