Aims & Scope
Human IT is a multi-disciplinary and scholarly journal with the goal of bringing forth new research and discussion about digital media as communicative, aesthetic, and ludic instruments.
The journal is closely aligned with the new field of digital humanities.
We welcome contributions from the humanities, the social, behavioural, and natural sciences, as well as technology.
Human IT aspires to be a forum for new research which risks falling outside of the borders of intra-disciplinary channels of publication as a result of its multi-disciplinary approach or unorthodox choice of subject.
We work with an extended editorial board which includes representatives from many different scholarly disciplines, practices, and countries.
Human IT contains both a refereed section and an open section.
For both sections, we accept scholarly texts of different types and on different levels, including empirically founded research reports and theoretical discussions, presentations of completed or planned research projects and studies as well as scholarly essays and longer literature reviews.
Periodically, an issue will be devoted to a special theme that accords with the overall topics of the journal, for instance, “Language and ITâ€, “Computerization and Narrative Fictionâ€, “E-democracyâ€, or “Artificial intelligenceâ€.
View Aims & ScopeAbstracting & Indexing
Journal is indexed in leading academic databases, ensuring global visibility and accessibility of our peer-reviewed research.
Subjects & Keywords
Journal’s research areas, covering key disciplines and specialized sub-topics in Computer Science and Social Sciences, designed to support cutting-edge academic discovery.
Licensing & Copyright
This journal operates under an Open Access model. Articles are freely accessible to the public immediately upon publication. The content is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), allowing users to share and adapt the work with proper attribution.
Copyright remains with the author(s), and no permission is required for non-commercial use, provided the original source is cited.