The editor ensures that published material is securely archived. Hitit Theology Journal sends all published articles it publishes on an open-access basis, without further intervention from the author(s), to archives, where they are made fully available. The Author or its funding body may deposit a copy of the Author’s Accepted Manuscript in archiving sites. The Tetkik author licence allows reuse with attribution of the origin of the article (a full citation) for non-commercial use only. For commercial use, our permissions policy applies.
Hitit Theology Journal is committed to keeping research articles open access, with reuse via CC-BY-NC Creative Commons licences, and to depositing the full-text content in the archive platforms as well as full open access on https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/hid
Archiving Policy: LOCKSS
Repository Policy: https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/pub/hid
Articles published in Hitit Theology Journal are archived digitally in LOCKSS. In addition, published articles can be accessed by the author in the institutional archive of the university (DSpace, AVESIS, etc.), subject archives, or other archives without the embargo period. So anyone can access this publication for free.
The publisher of Hitit Theology Journal, Hitit University Press, is pleased to announce its archive policy in line with its policy of supporting the dissemination of research results:
Hitit University Press allows authors to use the final published version of an article (publisher pdf) for self-archiving (author's personal website) and/or archiving in an institutional repository after publication. Authors may self-archive their articles in public and/or commercial subject-based archives. There is no embargo period, but the published source should be cited, and a link should be set to the journal homepage or DOI of the articles. Authors can download the output of the article as a PDF document. Authors can send copies of the article to their colleagues without any embargo.
Hitit University Press allows all versions of articles (sent version, accepted version, published version) to be stored in an institutional or other archive preferred by the author without embargo.
Hitit Theology Journal uses the LOCKSS system to allow permanent archives to be created. Based on Stanford University Libraries, the LOCKSS Program provides award-winning, low-cost, open-source digital preservation tools to provide libraries and publishers with access to permanent and authoritative digital content. The LOCKSS Program is a library-led digital preservation system built on the principle of "securing large numbers of copies". The LOCKSS Program develops and supports libraries using open-source end-to-end digital preservation software.
Published Version
OA Publishing: Open Access
OAI: https://dergipark.org.tr/api/public/oai/hid/
LOCKSS: http://dergipark.org.tr/hid/lockss-manifest
RSS: http://dergipark.org.tr/hid/rss-feeds
Embargo: No Embargo
License: CC BY-NC 4.0
Copyright Owner: Authors (Authors retain copyright, without restrictions)
Location: Journal Website, Institutional Archive, Crossref, Journal Website, Institutional Site, Author's Personal Website, Public and/or Commercial Subject Based Archives.
Policy Conditions: The journal should be cited in accordance with the citation and citation standards. It should be linked to the publisher version with the DOI.
Accepted Version
Embargo: No Embargo
Location: Journal Website, Institutional Archive, Author's Personal Website, Public and/or Commercial Subject Based Archives.
Copyright Owner: Authors (Authors retain copyright, without restrictions)
Submitted Version
Embargo: No Embargo
Copyright Owner: Authors (Authors retain copyright, without restrictions)
Location: Journal Website, Institutional Archive, Author's Personal Website, Public and/or Commercial Subject Based Archives.
Persistent Article Identifier: DOI
Hitit Theology Journal uses the digital object identifier (DOI). DOI is used to find the article no matter where it is located.
ORCID: Yes
Hitit Theology Journal requires ORCID IDs to be in the article metadata. An ORCID (Open Researcher and Contributor) ID is an alphanumeric code to uniquely identify authors.
Open Citations (I4OC): Yes
Hitit Theology Journal complies with I4OC standards for open citations. The I4OC standards ask that citations are structured, separable, and open.
Hitit Theology Journal is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY NC).