UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State’s Journal of Information Policy (JIP) is celebrating 15 years as a leading source of research for policymakers and scholars, while continuing to adapt to a fast-changing digital landscape.
The journal is published by the Institute for Information Policy (IIP), which was created in 1997 and is co-housed in the Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications and the College of Information Sciences and Technology. The IIP is a major resource of academic research for government entities.
When the institute started the JIP in 2011, the journal grew significantly and built a reputation as a source for timely evidence-based technology and communication research, according to Krishna Jayakar, journal editor and a professor of telecommunications in the Bellisario College. The journal’s editors make a concerted effort to maintain high peer-reviewed standards while publishing research on an evolving topical focus, within six weeks of submission, which is a quick turnaround in the academic world.
“We publish articles that have strong policy relevance, and that, of course, changes regularly,” Jayakar said. “For example, if you look at the articles published this year, we have one on cellular broadband and others on disinformation in social media and digital rights protection.”
Jayakar added that the JIP has published special issues on artificial intelligence, cybercrime and privacy, as well.