Society for Scholarly Publishing
The Society for Scholarly Publishing is a professional society, founded in 1978, dedicated to promoting and advancing communication and networking among all sectors of the scholarly communications community. It has approximately 1,100 members from 24 countries including publishers, service providers, librarians, researchers, and consultants.
SSP is organized as a 501 tax-exempt educational society.
Scope
The Society for Scholarly Publishing, founded in 1978, is a nonprofit organization formed to promote and advance communication among all sectors of the scholarly publication community through networking, information dissemination, and facilitation of new developments in the field.SSP members represent all aspects of scholarly publishing — including publishers, printers, e-products developers, technical service providers, librarians, and editors. SSP members come from a wide range of large and small commercial and nonprofit organizations. They meet at SSP's annual meetings, educational seminars, webinars, and Focus Groups to hear the latest trends from respected colleagues and to discuss common and mutual goals and viewpoints.
SSP is also unique among scholarly communications associations in that it does not take positions on political issues.
Activities
''The Scholarly Kitchen''
The Scholarly Kitchen is a blog published by the SSP. Contributors include senior professionals in scholarly communications. Topics cover journals, textbooks, open access, metrics, and research libraries. The blog was founded in 2008 by Kent Anderson, who served as the editor-in-chief until 2013 when he became president of SSP. Since then, David Crotty has been the executive editor.The Scholarly Kitchen was a 2010 nominee for the Webby "Blog-Business" award.
It has been an important site within academia for discussion of the open access movement.
The Society for Scholarly Publishing established The Scholarly Kitchen in February 2008 to:
- Keep SSP members and interested parties aware of new developments in publishing
- Point to research reports and projects
- Interpret the significance of relevant research in a balanced way
- Suggest areas that need more input by identifying gaps in knowledge
- Translate findings from related endeavors
- Attract the community of STM information experts interested in these things and give them a place to contribute
The Chefs
In addition to contributing their blog posts, a number of the Chefs have represented the blog as featured speakers at scholarly communications conferences, including the SSP Annual Meeting, the Association of Learned and Professional Society Publishers Annual Meeting, the International Association of Scientific, Technical, and Medical Publishers Frankfurt Conference, and the European Association of Science Editors /International Society of Managing and Technical Editors joint meeting.