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| Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences | |
|---|---|
| Name | Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences |
| Founded | 19xx |
| Country | [Country] |
| Headquarters | [City] |
| Publications | Books, journals, monographs, proceedings |
| Topics | Natural sciences, social sciences, humanities, applied sciences |
Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences
The Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences is the principal scholarly press associated with a national academy, responsible for producing monographs, journals, conference proceedings, and reference works linked to institutions such as Russian Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Polish Academy of Sciences, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Royal Society-affiliated presses, Académie des sciences, National Academy of Sciences (United States), Deutsche Akademie der Wissenschaften, and other prominent academies. It serves as a nexus between research institutes like Max Planck Society, CNRS, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and international organizations including UNESCO, European Research Council, NATO Science Programme, and World Health Organization to disseminate outputs from conferences such as the Solvay Conference, International Congress of Mathematicians, World Economic Forum panels, and symposia organized by Smithsonian Institution and British Museum. The press often publishes works associated with scholars from universities and institutes including Harvard University, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, Princeton University, Yale University, University of Tokyo, Peking University, Tsinghua University, Sorbonne University, University of Bologna, Heidelberg University, University of Vienna, University of Warsaw, Lomonosov Moscow State University, and Seoul National University.
The press traces origins to models exemplified by Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Elsevier, Springer, Johns Hopkins University Press, and Manchester University Press, with early institutional frameworks inspired by reforms linked to figures like Mikhail Lomonosov, Dmitri Mendeleev, Marie Curie, Niels Bohr, Albert Einstein, Ivan Pavlov, Srinivasa Ramanujan, Alan Turing, and Emil Fischer. Over decades it interacted with events such as the Russian Revolution, World War II, the Cold War, the Prague Spring, and the European Union enlargement to adapt editorial lines, merge with academies comparable to Academia Sinica, Korean Academy of Science and Technology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, and respond to initiatives like Bologna Process and agreements influenced by WIPO. Historical partnerships included collaborations with publishers like Pergamon Press, Routledge, Wiley, and Taylor & Francis, and with research networks connected to CERN, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and JSTOR.
The organizational model mirrors governance practices seen at Royal Society of London, National Academy of Sciences (United States), Academy of Sciences of the USSR, and Chinese Academy of Sciences, with editorial boards resembling those at Nature Publishing Group, Science (journal), Cell Press, and committees populated by members from National Institutes of Health, Max Planck Institute for Physics, Institute of Physics (IOP), Fraunhofer Society, Riken, and CNRS Institut Pasteur. Management units coordinate production linked to printing partners in cities such as Moscow, Beijing, Warsaw, Vienna, London, Cambridge, Massachusetts, New York City, Berlin, Paris, and Budapest, and liaise with distribution hubs like United States Library of Congress, British Library, Bibliothèque nationale de France, German National Library, and National Diet Library (Japan). Legal and rights offices interact with entities including World Intellectual Property Organization, European Patent Office, and national ministries such as Ministry of Education (China), Ministry of Science and Technology (Russia), and Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (United Kingdom).
Series development follows examples like Cambridge Companions, Oxford Handbooks, Elements (Cambridge University Press), Annals of Mathematics Studies, and Springer Series in Computational Mathematics. The press issues peer-reviewed journals modeled after Proceedings of the Royal Society, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Acta Mathematica, Journal of the American Chemical Society, Physical Review Letters, The Lancet, Nature Communications, and monograph lines akin to Princeton Series in Applied Mathematics. It publishes conference proceedings from gatherings such as the International Congress of Mathematicians, American Geophysical Union meetings, SIGGRAPH, NeurIPS, and symposia organized by European Molecular Biology Organization, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Royal Society of Edinburgh.
Editorial policies align with standards observed at Committee on Publication Ethics, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, and institutions like CrossRef, ORCID, Clarivate Analytics, Scopus (Elsevier), and Directory of Open Access Journals. Peer review practices draw on models used by Nature (journal), Science (journal), The Lancet, PLOS, and BMJ, with editorial oversight by academicians affiliated to Russian Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Polish Academy of Sciences, Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, and Austrian Academy of Sciences. The press implements policies regarding indexing in Web of Science, PubMed, MathSciNet, Zentralblatt MATH, and citation metrics managed by Journal Citation Reports.
Distribution networks connect to global suppliers like Springer Nature, Taylor & Francis Group, Wiley-Blackwell, Elsevier, and digital platforms such as Project MUSE, JSTOR, Google Books, HathiTrust, and WorldCat. Outreach programs partner with museums and cultural institutions including British Museum, Smithsonian Institution, V&A Museum, Louvre, Pergamon Museum, and universities for public lectures referencing figures like Isaac Newton, Galileo Galilei, Charles Darwin, Sigmund Freud, and Carl Linnaeus. The press participates in book fairs including the Frankfurt Book Fair, London Book Fair, Beijing International Book Fair, Bologna Children's Book Fair, and regional events hosted by Warsaw Book Fair and Vienna Book Fair.
Notable works include translations and editions of classics by Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, Dmitri Mendeleev, Marie Curie, Niels Bohr, Max Planck, Leonhard Euler, Andrey Kolmogorov, Sofia Kovalevskaya, André Weil, Alexander Friedmann, Ludwig Boltzmann, Erwin Schrödinger, Paul Dirac, John von Neumann, Kurt Gödel, Benoit Mandelbrot, Richard Feynman, Rosalind Franklin, Gregor Mendel, James Clerk Maxwell, Michael Faraday, Louis Pasteur, Rudolf Virchow, Emmy Noether, Ada Lovelace, Florence Nightingale, Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Noam Chomsky, Hannah Arendt, Karl Popper, Thomas Kuhn, Pierre-Simon Laplace, Évariste Galois, Srinivasa Ramanujan, Alan Turing, Hermann Weyl, Hermann von Helmholtz, Alexander von Humboldt, Charles Babbage, Samuel Morse, Gregor Mendel, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, André-Marie Ampère, Georg Cantor, and contemporary scholars affiliated with Harvard University, Princeton University, Stanford University, University of Cambridge, and University of Oxford.
The press and its publications have received honors analogous to awards like the Nobel Prize-associated publications, Fields Medal-referenced monographs, Pulitzer Prize mentions, Kluge Prize-linked works, and national awards from bodies such as Academy of Sciences of the USSR successor institutions, Chinese Academy of Sciences commendations, Polish Academy of Sciences medals, Austrian Academy of Sciences prizes, and professional recognitions from Royal Society and National Academy of Sciences (United States). Individual volumes and authors have been cited in prize announcements tied to Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Fields Medal, Turing Award, Abel Prize, Copley Medal, Kaiser Wilhelm Society-era distinctions, and regional honors such as the Order of Merit (Poland) and Order of the Red Banner of Labour.
Category:Academic publishing houses