Friday, May 19, 2023

Open Access Journal: AABNER: Advances in Ancient Biblical and Near Eastern Research

[First posted 31 December 2021, updated 19 May 2023]
 

The journal is the first open-access and forum-peer-reviewed journal that covers the entire field of biblical studies and cognate fields in its diversity, and it is committed to the principles of the EABS in terms of equal opportunity, non-discrimination, and academic rigor. This journal innovates the way humanities scholarship is published, by utilizing an open peer-review system  known as "forum review." In this system all reviewers' comments are visible to all other reviewers. This system enables AABNER to maintain rigor while encouraging innovative approaches and keeping review time to a minimum. 

The aim of the journal is to provide a high-quality and innovative venue for the open access dissemination of biblical and cognate scholarship from Europe and around the world. The journal will encompass all fields touching on and relevant for the study of both the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament, early Jewish and Christian studies, from ancient times to reception in the present, as represented by the remit of the EABS. Thus, studies involving the Near East and Mediterranean worlds in their own right also fall within this scope.

The broad scope of the journal will enable it to function as the premier disciplinary journal, much like the functions of Nature, History, and Communication in their respective fields. Moreover, the journal will seek to avoid methodological stagnation and disciplinary isolation through its deliberate commitment to plurality within its scope.

Vol 2 No 2 (2022): Categories and Boundaries in Second Temple Jewish Literature

Published: 2023-04-17

Categories and Boundaries Special Issue Introduction

Charlie Comerford, Joseph Scales

1–9

Blurring the Boundaries

David Z. Blackwell

77–112

How to Categorize the King

Peter Atkins

113–135

Named by the Name?

Theron Clay Mock, III

137–159

See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

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