Publishing information
 

ISSN
The ISSN of IJCIS in print is: 1875-6891
The ISSN of IJCIS on-line is: 1875-6883.

Copyright
Atlantis Press adheres to the principles of Creative Commons, meaning that we do not claim copyright of the work we publish. We only ask people using one of our publications to respect the integrity of the work and to refer to the original location, title and author(s).

On-line acces
All papers published in IJCIS will be published on-line as soon as they have been accepted and proofread. Subscribers will have immediate access to new papers (and receive a print copy). Any other interested reader will have free on-line access to the paper's full text 12 months after its official publication.

Articles can also be published as Open Access articles so that they are immediately available for free for any interested reader. For having an article published as an Open Access article, a processing fee of 950 euro is requested.

Special Issues
Should you wish to prepare a Special Issue for IJCIS, then please fill out the proposal form and send it to the editors-in-chief. They will consider your proposal and reply to you as soon as possible. Please click here to download the Special Issue proposal form.

Archiving
All articles of this journal as well as and their meta-data are stored in our electronic repository and are accessible on a permanent basis through an agreement with the Royal Library of the Netherlands. Through its e-depot service, which is the first in the world, the Royal Library guarantees a permanent archiving of all articles published by Atlantis Press.

DOI
All articles will be given a digital object identifier (DOI). DOIs are standardised digital identities used across all major scientific publishers and are managed by CrossRef. DOIs guarantee a permanent Web-address of the article, no matter where it is physically stored. So, when referring to an article you can either use the traditional reference information (name of publication, volume, issue, etc.), or use the DOI. Many people now use both notations. For more information on DOIs, see here.