Generated by GPT-5-mini| Vienna University Press | |
|---|---|
| Name | Vienna University Press |
| Native name | Universität Wien Verlag |
| Founded | 20th century |
| Headquarters | Vienna, Austria |
| Parent institution | University of Vienna |
| Publications | Books, journals, conference proceedings, monographs |
| Topics | Humanities, Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, Medicine, Law, Theology, Musicology |
Vienna University Press is the academic publishing imprint associated with the University of Vienna. It issues monographs, edited volumes, and journals across the Humanities and Sciences with ties to Austrian and international scholarship. Its output supports researchers affiliated with institutions such as the Max Planck Society, Austrian Academy of Sciences, and the European University Institute, and it participates in European publishing networks including Erasmus Programme collaborations.
Established in the 20th century, the press developed alongside the expansion of the University of Vienna during the interwar period and post‑World War II reconstruction. Early engagements connected authors from the Habsburg Monarchy era to contemporary scholars linked to the Viennese Modernism movement and figures associated with the Vienna Circle. During the Cold War, the press maintained scholarly exchange with institutions such as the University of Oxford, the Sorbonne, and the University of Bologna, while contributing to debates influenced by the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye aftermath. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries it aligned with European research frameworks like the Horizon 2020 programme and engaged with debates around the Lisbon Strategy.
The press operates under the aegis of the University of Vienna rectorate and reports to faculties including the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Catholic Theology. Governance involves editorial boards drawn from departments such as the Institute for History, the Department of Philosophy, and the Center for Translation Studies. Strategic oversight has involved cooperation with bodies like the Austrian Science Fund and liaison with municipal authorities in Vienna and ministries such as the Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Research. Its advisory committees have included academics affiliated with the University of Cambridge, the University of Chicago, the University of Heidelberg, and the Jagiellonian University.
The publishing program encompasses series in Medieval Studies, Musicology, Art History, Juridical Studies, and Theology. Signature series have featured contributions linked to scholars associated with the Sigmund Freud Museum, the Mozarteum University Salzburg, and the Vienna State Opera research projects. The press issues journals that intersect with projects from the Austrian Academy of Sciences and special issues tied to conferences hosted by institutions such as the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, the European University Institute, and the Central European University. Series editors have worked with collaborators from the University of São Paulo, the University of Tokyo, the National University of Singapore, and Columbia University.
Editorial decisions are made following peer review standards comparable to those at the Royal Society, the German Research Foundation, and the National Institutes of Health in biomedical contexts. Manuscripts undergo review by external referees drawn from faculties such as the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Vienna, the Department of Classics at the University of Oxford, and the School of Oriental and African Studies. The press uses style guidelines informed by models from publishers like Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, and De Gruyter. Ethics and plagiarism screening reference protocols used by the Committee on Publication Ethics and legal frameworks including those upheld by the Austrian Data Protection Authority.
The press has expanded digital dissemination through platforms interoperable with repositories such as Zenodo, PubMed Central, and institutional repositories at the University of Vienna. It participates in open access initiatives aligned with the Plan S framework and coordinates with consortia including COAR and the European Open Science Cloud. Digital projects have been undertaken in collaboration with the Austrian National Library, the Vienna City Library, and computational partners at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria. E‑book distribution reaches services used by libraries like the British Library and the Library of Congress.
The press has published works by scholars linked to the Vienna Circle legacy, historians associated with the Institute for Advanced Study, and musicologists who have contributed to research on Gustav Mahler and Arnold Schoenberg. Authors include academics formerly at the University of Cambridge, the Université PSL, the Humboldt University of Berlin, and the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Notable topics span studies of the First World War, analyses of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, and research on figures connected to the Congress of Vienna. Editions and translations have involved cooperation with translators at the Babelsberg Studio and editors experienced with material relating to the Vienna Secession.
The press partners with research infrastructures such as the CERN Collaborations Office for scientific monographs, the European Research Council for funded project outputs, and cultural institutions including the Belvedere and the Albertina Museum. It contributes to doctoral training networks tied to the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions and collaborates with publishing houses like Springer Nature and Taylor & Francis on co‑publishing ventures. Citation and impact metrics register engagement from scholars at the University of Pennsylvania, the Princeton University, and the Yale University, reflecting the press’s role in disseminating Austrian and Central European scholarship internationally.
Category:Academic publishing houses Category:University of Vienna