Relaunch of open access JCMS
Egypt

Relaunch of open access JCMS


Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies

The Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies is fully peer reviewed and Open Access. It contains research on conservation science, artefact studies, restoration, museum studies, environment studies, collection management and curation. Published from the Institute of Archaeology at University College London from 1992 to 2002, the journal is to be relaunched in 2011 in collaboration with the British Library, with a newly constituted international editorial board.

The new editorial team will be announced shortly. If you are interested in submitting a paper before then, please contact the Journal Manager.




- Journal Of Near Eastern Studies
www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jnes/69/1 Thanks to Kat for doing all the work to extract the seven book reviews of Egypt-related interest from the latest volume of the Journal of Near Eastern Studies. Neither articles nor book reviews are available free...

- Fustat Pottery
Leiden Journal of Pottery Studies For those with access to academic libraries the current issue of the Leiden Journal of Pottery Studies (54, 2008) has the following article: A new ethnoarchaeological documentation project at the Fustat pottery workshops,...

- The Journal Of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections
UA News The Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections, an electronic peer-reviewed journal, has been created out of a collaboration with UA faculty and the UA Libraries. By University Communications March 6, 2009 The University of Arizona Libraries...

- Journal Of Near Eastern Studies Volume 68, Number 1
Thanks Kat The Journal of Near Eastern Studies Volume 68, Number 1 (January 2009) is now available at http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/toc/jnes/68/1 1 relevant article: On the Identification of the Ships of kzd/ry in the Erased Customs Account from Elephantine...

- Free Academic Articles Get Read But Don't Generate More Citations
Science Daily When academic articles are "open access" or free online, they get read more often, but they don't -- going against conventional wisdom -- get cited more often in academic literature, finds a new Cornell study. The reason, suggest Cornell...



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