Browse Inside eLife

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  1. eLife Global South Committee for Open Science: Applications open for candidates to join for a two-year term

    One year after forming this Committee, we’re inviting applications from researchers in the Caribbean, the Indian subcontinent, Latin America and Pacific Islands to join for a term starting January 2025.
  2. Early-Career Advisory Group: Welcoming six new members

    Six new members join our Early-Career Advisory Group, to strengthen the voice of early-career researchers in transforming research culture and scholarly communication.
  3. eLife opens recruitment for Editor-in-Chief

    eLife is recruiting for a new Editor-in-Chief to drive change in research communication and guide our vision for the journal.
  4. Ben Barres Spotlight Awards: Announcing the winners for 2024

    Fourteen researchers, eight of them as authors of Reviewed Preprints, have been recognised in the awards’ most geographically diverse cohort to date.
    1. Ecology

    Publishing with eLife: "smooth, fair, and transparent"

    Ushio Masayuki tells us about his experience publishing with eLife’s new model.
    1. Evolutionary Biology

    Publishing with eLife: “innovative and intriguing”

    Chunxiao Li, postdoctoral researcher in vertebrate paleontology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China, shares her experience of publishing a Reviewed Preprint with eLife.
  5. eLife Community Ambassadors: A summary of their latest achievements

    Celebrating the global impact and achievements of eLife’s Community Ambassadors.
  6. eLife Latest: Welcoming new eLife editors

    Bringing a broad range of expertise, 126 researchers join eLife’s editorial board
  7. Ben Barres Spotlight Awards: Applications open for 2024

    Awards of up to $5,000 are now available to researchers from underrepresented backgrounds or countries with limited funding to support their research, career and community.
  8. Toward a New Open Access: The Gates Foundation policy refresh

    The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation are shifting their focus toward preprints. What does that mean for grantees, for eLife and for Open Science?