Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of the European Mathematical Society | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of the European Mathematical Society |
| Discipline | Mathematics |
| Abbreviation | J. Eur. Math. Soc. |
| Publisher | European Mathematical Society |
| Country | Europe |
| Frequency | Bimonthly |
| History | 1999–present |
| Impact | (varies) |
Journal of the European Mathematical Society The Journal of the European Mathematical Society is a peer-reviewed mathematical journal published by the European Mathematical Society that presents research across pure and applied Mathematics with international authorship and readership. It aims to bridge communities associated with institutions such as the Clay Mathematics Institute, Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques, Max Planck Institute for Mathematics, Princeton University, and École Normale Supérieure. The journal attracts submissions connected to researchers affiliated with bodies like the University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Harvard University, Stanford University, and the Sorbonne University.
The journal was established in 1999 by the European Mathematical Society as part of a wider initiative following meetings at venues such as the International Congress of Mathematicians and collaborations between societies including the American Mathematical Society, the London Mathematical Society, and the Deutsche Mathematiker-Vereinigung. Early editorial leadership included figures who had ties to the Fields Medal community, the Abel Prize, and research groups at the University of Bonn, ETH Zurich, and University of Paris-Sud. Over successive volumes the journal published work related to conferences at the Hausdorff Center for Mathematics, the Institut Henri Poincaré, and the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute, reflecting evolving trends influenced by breakthroughs like the Wiles proof of Fermat's Last Theorem and developments following the Langlands program.
The journal's scope covers areas represented by departments and groups at the University of Chicago, Columbia University, Yale University, and the University of Tokyo, including topics linked to research by scholars associated with the Courant Institute, the Kurt Gödel Research Center, and the Niels Bohr Institute. It publishes original research in subjects connected with work of mathematicians honored by the Chern Medal, the Shaw Prize, and the Wolf Prize. Editorial policy emphasizes originality and rigor in line with standards upheld by the European Research Council and funding agencies such as the EU Framework Programme. The journal solicits contributions on themes influenced by projects at the Newton Institute, the Banach Center, and collaborations involving the Royal Society and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
Issues are produced bimonthly with distribution channels spanning university libraries at institutions like the University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, ETH Zurich, and research libraries including the Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Bodleian Library. The publisher, the European Mathematical Society, coordinates with commercial and academic partners comparable to arrangements seen between the American Mathematical Society and institutional repositories such as those at arXiv-host institutions and repositories linked to the Max Planck Society. Access models have interacted with mandates from bodies like the European Commission and national agencies in France, Germany, United Kingdom, and Spain.
The journal is indexed in major services used by scholars at the Institute for Advanced Study, the Royal Institution, and national academies such as the Académie des Sciences and the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. It appears in databases alongside journals from publishers such as the American Mathematical Society, Springer, Elsevier, and Cambridge University Press, and is discoverable through platforms associated with the Zentralblatt MATH database, the Mathematical Reviews/MathSciNet service, and library catalogs at the Library of Congress and the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek.
The journal has published articles that influenced research areas tied to work by scholars connected with the Fields Medal recipients, the Abel Prize laureates, and the Coxeter-related geometry communities. Papers appearing in its volumes have been cited in follow-on research at the Institute of Mathematics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the Scuola Normale Superiore, and centers at the University of Bonn and ETH Zurich, contributing to advancements in areas related to the Langlands program, Algebraic Geometry initiatives associated with the Grothendieck school, and analytical work influenced by the Calabi–Yau and Riemann Hypothesis programs. The journal’s impact is evident in citations within monographs produced by publishers like Springer-Verlag and in references in proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians and symposia at the Centre International de Rencontres Mathématiques.
The editorial board comprises editors and associate editors drawn from institutions including the University of Cambridge, Princeton University, ETH Zurich, Université Paris-Saclay, University of Milan, Heidelberg University, Uppsala University, and the University of Helsinki. The peer review process follows double-blind or single-blind protocols common in journals associated with the American Mathematical Society and the London Mathematical Society, with handling editors coordinating referees from networks overlapping with the European Research Council, national academies like the Royal Society, and specialized research centers such as the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics and the Institut des Hautes Études Scientifiques.
Category:Mathematics journals Category:European Mathematical Society publications