The Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) and the Society of China University Journals (CUJS) have announced a formal partnership designed to elevate the global profile of high-quality Chinese open access journals. This collaboration, formalized in May 2026, focuses on improving visibility, discoverability, and adherence to international best practices for journals published by Chinese universities and research institutions.
Background on Open Access Publishing in Chinese Higher Education
Open access publishing allows readers free access to scholarly articles without paywalls, promoting wider dissemination of research findings. In China, university-sponsored journals play a central role in academic communication, particularly in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics fields. Many of these journals are overseen by institutions under the Ministry of Education and provincial education administrations. The partnership addresses longstanding challenges in making these journals more accessible both domestically and abroad.
Chinese universities produce a vast volume of research output each year. However, many journals have historically faced barriers to international indexing and recognition. The new agreement builds on earlier joint efforts, including DOAJ China Day events held in 2023 and 2025, which brought together editors, publishers, and infrastructure providers to discuss open access standards.
About the Society of China University Journals
CUJS is a national, non-profit academic organization formed by editorial departments of STEM journals sponsored by universities and related institutions. It operates under the supervision of the Ministry of Education and provincial education bodies. With more than 1,300 institutional members and over 4,000 individual members, CUJS supports training in open access, research integrity, peer review, and publishing technology. It maintains close ties with international academic publishing societies and has five internal departments along with 16 branches.
The Role of DOAJ in Global Scholarly Communication
DOAJ serves as a community-curated directory indexing high-quality, peer-reviewed open access journals across all disciplines. It currently lists more than 22,000 journals and relies on over 100 volunteer experts from libraries and academia to maintain standards. DOAJ emphasizes transparency, quality control, and accessibility, making it a key resource for researchers, librarians, and institutions worldwide. As of the partnership announcement, DOAJ indexes more than 550 journals from China.
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Key Elements of the DOAJ-CUJS Partnership
The agreement formalizes ongoing cooperation on events such as the DOAJ China Day series and other promotional activities aimed at raising awareness of open access principles. Both organizations may also pursue joint project-based initiatives to promote best practices in scholarly publishing. This includes guidance on licensing, peer review processes, article processing charges, and long-term digital preservation.
DOAJ Managing Director Joanna Ball highlighted the rapid development of China’s open access community and expressed hope that the partnership will enhance awareness of open access benefits. CUJS President Zhang Tieming noted that the collaboration will support quality improvement and expansion of the open access movement in China and globally.
Benefits for Chinese Universities and Researchers
University administrators and faculty stand to gain from increased international exposure for their journals. Better visibility can lead to higher citation rates, stronger international collaborations, and improved institutional rankings. Journals that meet DOAJ criteria often attract more submissions from global authors and benefit from enhanced credibility.
For early-career researchers and PhD students in China, the partnership supports clearer pathways to publishing in recognized open access outlets. This aligns with broader national goals of advancing scientific innovation and international academic exchange under frameworks overseen by the Ministry of Education.
Challenges in Scaling Open Access in China
Despite progress, Chinese journals encounter issues such as inconsistent peer review standards, limited English-language interfaces, and varying policies on article processing charges. Some journals still rely heavily on print formats or lack robust digital preservation strategies. The partnership aims to address these through shared training and resources.
Cultural and structural factors also play a role. Many university journals operate with limited budgets and staffing, making compliance with international standards resource-intensive. Joint workshops and guidelines from DOAJ and CUJS are expected to provide practical support.
Impact on Global Academic Publishing Landscape
Greater inclusion of Chinese journals in DOAJ strengthens the diversity of the global open access ecosystem. It provides researchers outside China with easier access to high-quality work from one of the world’s largest producers of scientific output. The partnership may also encourage reciprocal interest from international publishers in Chinese-language or bilingual journals.
Industry observers note that such collaborations reflect a maturing phase in open access, moving beyond initial growth toward quality assurance and sustainable scaling.
Future Outlook and Next Steps
Both organizations plan to continue co-organizing events and exploring additional initiatives. Potential areas include expanded training programs for journal editors, development of resources on research integrity, and promotion of diamond open access models that minimize author fees.
Chinese universities interested in participating can engage through CUJS membership or by preparing journals for DOAJ application. The partnership positions China’s higher education sector to play an even more prominent role in global scholarly communication in the coming years.
Practical Implications for University Administrators
Leaders at Chinese colleges and universities should review their journal portfolios for alignment with DOAJ standards. Investing in editorial training, English-language abstracts, and transparent policies can accelerate inclusion. Administrators may also consider allocating resources for digital infrastructure to support long-term accessibility.
Faculty development programs could incorporate sessions on open access publishing benefits, helping researchers maximize the reach of their work through indexed outlets.
