Journal Sites
Static public pages and OJS journal routes provide clear public entry points for authors and readers.
Journal hosting, institutional email, backups, export preparation, and indexing-ready metadata for sustainable journal operations.
The publishing infrastructure layer supports the practical work behind a journal: public journal pages, OJS hosting, email delivery, secure files, backup routines, export preparation, and metadata discipline.
The current deployment is intentionally simple: one public site, one OJS test platform, institutional mail, and server-side backups. This keeps the system understandable while the editorial workflow is still being tested.
Static public pages and OJS journal routes provide clear public entry points for authors and readers.
SMTP-backed journal mail supports reviewer invitations, decisions, and editorial office communication.
Database, files, and configuration should be backed up and periodically restored in a separate test check.
Article metadata, author records, references, identifiers, and compliance statements need consistent structure.
DOI, Crossref, DOAJ, PubMed, JATS, and OAI pathways can be prepared after publication workflows stabilize.
Administrators, editors, reviewers, and authors should have clear permissions and limited access by role.