About the Journal
Disruption constitutes a fundamental category in the research on societal change at TU Dresden. In a multiperspective and interdisciplinary manner, this journal provides the opportunity to conceive scientific communication in a transformative way and to develop new presentation formats in an experimental context. The publication platform represents a non-exclusive part of the work of the Disruption and Societal Change Center at TU Dresden, TUDiSC. However, external researchers in the field of disruption are also invited to contribute their work.
Publications that have a connection to disruption can, therefore, be submitted and will be published in direct communication with the authors, in accordance with the respective issue.
The submitted works should comply with the guidelines of the DFG for safeguarding good research practice. The works can be submitted in German or English. For articles that have been partially or entirely developed in the context of a third-party project such as the Disruption and Societal Change Center, the authors are generally obliged to include the formulations required by the funding agency.
All issues are subject to the Creative Commons by 4.0 license.
Unless otherwise stated,
Publications are made under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives). If you as an author wish to have a different license, please clarify with the editorial team whether this is possible. We aim to enable free use for all, in order to make knowledge widely accessible.
Organisational information
The provider of the publication services is
SLUB Dresden
Postal address: 01054 Dresden
Visitor address: Zellescher Weg 18 | 01069 Dresden
Open Access Representative
Katrin Stump
Phone: +49 351 4677-123
Fax: +49 351 4677-111
E-Mail: Katrin.Stump@slub-dresden.de
Internet: www.slub-dresden.de
Publication services are managed by Department 3.5 Open Access Publishing at SLUB Dresden. The team can be contacted via E-mail: diamondoa@slub-dresden.de
All documents are indexed by the library or the authors themselves and can also be found via this indexing. The following subject indexing tools are used or offered as a minimum:
- Indexing: free keywords in English
- Classification: Dewey Decimal Classification DDC
The electronic documents are provided with individual and permanent addresses that allow direct access to the documents.
The documents are listed in suitable databases, including
- the SLUB catalogue
- the catalogue of the German National Library
- BASE
- Google Scholar
International standards, such as the guidelines of the Open Archives Initiative (OAI), are used and further developed for the indexing, storage, provision and archiving of electronic documents.