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Campus webinar: How to get your academic work published

Hear from four experts from the UK and US about the academic publishing process, from how to find a publisher and approach a journal to writing proposals, open access and much more
6 May 2026
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Take your academic writing skills to the next level

With the academic publishing landscape rapidly changing, it can be difficult for early career researchers to know where and when to take that first step on the journey. Yet, the benefits for your career can be transformative: job offers, promotions, winning research grants, a network of like-minded scholars. 

Here, we’ll demystify the process, taking you through each step and providing guidance on approaching publishers, writing proposals, getting published in a journal, how much or how little to use generative artificial intelligence, open access and what goes into the production of a finished academic title. 

In this 60-minute discussion, we ask four academic publishing experts from Campus+ partner institutions University of Edinburgh, Virginia Tech, Georgia Tech and the University of Edinburgh for their advice on going from Word document to published work.

Our panellists are:

Lisa Yaszek is professor of science fiction studies at Georgia Tech. She explores science fiction as a window into culture and has published award-winning books including Sisters of Tomorrow: The First Women of Science Fiction (2016) and Literary Afrofuturism in the Twenty-First Century (2021).

John Atkinson is manager at University of Westminster Press. His career extends from one of the biggest HE publishing firms, Simon & Schuster Academic, to the smallest, his own – which was acquired by Liverpool University Press in 2020. He also sits on the organising committee of the Open Institutional Publishing Association (OIPA).

Corinne Guimont is director of Virginia Tech Publishing and Press. She works with faculty and students to create digital publications using a range of tools and platforms. Her background is in information science, digital humanities and e-textbook publishing. 

Emily Sharpe is senior commissioning editor for literary studies at Edinburgh University Press. She commissions research monographs and edited collections, scholarly reference works and critical editions in Shakespeare and early modern literature, modernist literature, postcolonial studies and contemporary literature.

If you would like advice and insight from academics and university staff delivered direct to your inbox each week, sign up for the Campus newsletter.

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