Journals, News

Liverpool University Press partners with Research4Life to increase global access to Humanities research

In response to calls from Research4Life users for greater representation of Social Science and Humanities research, we are pleased to announce that we have now extended our provision to Research4Life and the full collection of journals published by LUP is now available to access for those involved in the Research4Life scheme.

Art, Film studies, Heritage and Landscape, History, Irish Studies, Jewish Studies, Journals, Literature, Liverpool Interest, Modern Languages, News, Poetry, Political History, postcolonial studies, Religious Studies, science fiction, Urban Studies

The 2025 Free Issues | Read free journal issues online now

We are delighted to bring you the 2025 Free Issues. Each year we make one issue from each of our journals free to read, capturing the breadth and scope of the research that our journals publish, and the growth of LUP from its formation in 1899. Visit our Free Issues page to download free content in Modern Languages, Political History, Art & Sculpture, Culture Studies, Science Fiction Studies, Planning, and more.

Jewish Studies, Journals, Religious Studies, video blog

Polin Volume 37: Jews in Polish & German Lands

We are delighted to present Polin Volume 37. Available in journal format for the first time, Polin is published in partnership with the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization and will serve as the the premier journal on east European Jewish studies.

Ancient History & Classics, Journals, News, open access

Liverpool University Press to publish ‘Essays in Late Long Antiquity’ from 2026

Essays in Long Late Antiquity (ELLA) is a newly created Open Access journal which positions itself in the field of first millennium studies. It is a field which has seen growth in recent years and has an established momentum. The journal intends to move away from the Western European view of periodization, a view which the editors hope will entice interdisciplinary and supraregional approaches. Therefore, the journal hopes to cover the 3rd to the 9th centuries (200 – 800) and broader Afroeurasia in its research and to stand apart from discipline siloing.