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Statement of Purpose
The Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology is intended to provide scholars in the southern hemisphere with an avenue through which they can express their scholarship. The IPJP also serves as a networking opportunity for scholars in the region as they undertake their research. Similar avenues do exist in the Northern Hemisphere (Europe and North America).

linda_skrolysThe IPJP is intended primarily as a forum for Southern African, Indian, Australian, Asian, New Zealand and Pacific Island scholars to discuss a broad range of phenomenological issues. However, contributions from the Northern Hemisphere will also be considered.

The underlying assumption of the IPJP is that phenomenology provides researchers with a unique research philosophy which allows them to explore issues central to the question of being human. It enables the richness of human experience to be fully explicated.

We particularly seek to support and encourage those scholars who feel the need for a further dimension in their research that would enable them to explore topics whose import lies beyond the reach of measurement and calibration, and in areas such as human meaning, experience, values, and truthfulness. Moreover, we envisage the Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology as providing established scholars and students with an avenue for publishing written material and undertaking new exploratory research in areas such as emotional sentiment, mental states, bodily experience and existence as well as social and interpersonal relationships, and the contexts in which these take place.

Open Access: A Brief Introduction (by Peter Suber)
Open-access (OA) literature is digital, online, free of charge, and free of most copyright and licensing restrictions. OA is possible because of the internet and the consent of the author or copyright-holder.

OA is entirely compatible with peer review, and all the major OA initiatives for scientific and scholarly literature insist on its importance. Just as authors of journal articles donate their labour, so do most journal editors and referees participating in the peer review process.

OA literature is not free to produce, even if it is less expensive to produce than conventionally published literature. The question is not whether scholarly literature can be made costless, but whether there are better ways to pay the bills than by charging readers and creating access barriers. Business models for paying the bills depend on how OA is delivered.

There are two primary vehicles for delivering OA to research articles:  OA journals and OA archives (repositories).

OA Journals:
OA journals perform peer review and then make the approved contents freely available to the world. Their expenses consist of peer review, manuscript preparation, and server space.

OA journals pay their bills very much the way broadcast television and radio stations do: those with an interest in disseminating the content pay the production costs upfront so that access can be free of charge for everyone with the right equipment. Sometimes this means that journals have a subsidy from the hosting university or professional society. Sometimes it means that journals charge a processing fee on accepted articles, to be paid by the author or the author's sponsor (employer, funding agency).

OA journals that charge processing fees often waive them in cases of economic hardship, and those with institutional subsidies are sometimes able to significantly reduce the processing fee or not charge at all.

OA journals can get by on lower subsidies or fees if they have income from other publications, advertising, priced add-ons, or auxiliary services. Some institutions and consortia arrange fee discounts. Some OA publishers waive the fee for all researchers affiliated with institutions that have purchased an annual membership. In this regard, there is much room for creativity in finding ways to pay the costs of a peer-reviewed OA journal.

OA Archives (repositories):
OA archives or repositories do not perform peer review, but simply make their contents freely available to the world. They may contain unrefereed preprints, refereed postprints, or both.

Archives may belong to institutions such as universities and laboratories, or disciplines such as physics and economics.

Authors may archive their preprints without anyone else's permission, and a majority of journals already permit authors to archive their postprints. When archives comply with the metadata harvesting protocol of the Open Archives Initiative, then they are interoperable and users can find their contents without knowing which archives exist, where they are located, or what they contain. There is now open-source software for building and maintaining OAI-compliant archives and worldwide momentum for using it.

Listings
The IPJP has listings with several prestigious online databases, directories, repositories and research partnerships:

Directory of Open Access Journals
The IPJP is listed in the Directory of Open Access Journals which is a service that provides access to quality controlled open access journals. The DOAJ aims to be comprehensive and cover all open-access scientific and scholarly journals that use an appropriate quality control system to guarantee the content, and it is not limited to particular languages or subject areas.

The aim of the Directory is to increase the visibility and ease of use of open-access scientific and scholarly journals thereby promoting their increased usage and impact.

The Directory of Open Access Journals is hosted by Lund University Libraries Head Office (Sweden), and the project is funded by the Open Society Institute in Budapest and supported by the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC).

The directory only contains full-text, open-access scientific and scholarly journals that use an appropriate quality control system to guarantee the content.

SHERPA Project
The SHERPA partnership is a large, diverse and representative body of institutions, ranging from smaller specialised bodies such as SOAS (a constituent of the University of London, specializing in the arts, humanities, languages, and social sciences inter alia), through to large, diverse Universities like Cambridge and Oxford.

The partnership includes the British Library and the Arts and Humanities Development Service with their skills and experience in intellectual property rights, data preservation and collection management.

The partners are all research-led institutions that are well placed to take full advantage of the facilities that eprint repositories and extended-data repositories can offer.

The IPJP is registered with SHERPA as a Blue category publisher in terms of its publication policy and has adopted the Gold OA route.

Contemporary Research Database
The IPJP is included in the prestigious on-line Contemporary Research Database which covers a broad range of disciplines and subjects in the humanities, law and economics. To be included in their database for regular indexing, journals have to meet stringent requirements, including a strict adherence to peer-review systems, and, finally, be approved by the editor and/or the editorial board of the CRD.

SA ePublications
The IPJP is catalogued by SA ePublications which is the most comprehensive, searchable collection of full-text electronic South African journals in the world, and focuses on making journals published in South Africa available online. The service currently includes 227 publications, with new publications being added on an ongoing basis. The SA ePublications service enables users to easily locate, display and print full- text documents from their desktops; search on full text, on abstract, or on both, by article title, author, subject, ISSN, etc., and electronically access full-text versions of articles that are exact copies of the printed versions.

The DoE, South Africa
The IPJP is approved by the Department of Education (South Africa) for educational and research subsidy purposes. In order to be accredited by the DoE (under the auspices of the Council for Higher Education), journals have to be peer-reviewed and must show evidence of producing internationally acceptable scholarly material that supports high level learning, teaching and research. Additionally, approved journals must be devoted to disseminating original research and new developments within specific disciplines, sub-disciplines or fields of study.

Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf)
The IPJP is a member of the Editor's Forum, established under the auspices of ASSAf. The Forum aims to provide support, guidance, networking and quality control for South African-based journals through their voluntary association.

Publisher
The IPJP is published by NISC (Pty) Ltd in an online Open Access form. Print copies are available by subscription.

To View Journal Articles
To view journal articles, you must have a copy (free software) of Adobe Acrobat Reader on your computer.

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The IPJP is sponsored by the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Johannesburg (South Africa) and Edith Cowan University's Faculty of Regional Professional Studies (Australia), and published in association with NISC (Pty) Ltd.