Repository and Archiving Policy

The Thai Interdisciplinary and Sustainability Review (TISR) is fully committed to Open Access publishing and the long-term preservation of scholarly research. We support authors in maximizing the visibility, impact, and discoverability of their work while ensuring that all published articles remain permanently accessible to the global academic community.

 

1. Repository Policy (Author Self-Archiving)

TISR permits and encourages authors to self-archive their work in institutional, subject-based, or national repositories, as well as on personal websites and academic networking platforms (e.g., ResearchGate, Academia.edu, SSRN).
Authors retain the right to archive all versions of their manuscript under the following conditions:

• Submitted Version (Pre-print): Authors may share their original, un-refereed manuscript anywhere at any time.

• Accepted Version (Author Accepted Manuscript): Authors may deposit the final peer-reviewed and accepted version of their manuscript immediately upon acceptance, with no embargo period.

• Published Version (Version of Record): Authors may deposit the final, publisher-formatted PDF of the article immediately upon publication online, with no embargo period.

Conditions for Self-Archiving: Any version of the article deposited in a repository must fully acknowledge the original publication in TISR. For the Accepted and Published versions, authors must provide a full citation to the journal and include a permanent link to the article's formal publication on the journal's website via its Digital Object Identifier (DOI).

 

2. Archiving Policy (Long-term Digital Preservation)

In addition to supporting author self-archiving, TISR takes proactive measures to ensure the permanent availability, accessibility, and long-term digital preservation of all published content, safeguarding it against any potential systemic failures or discontinuation of the journal.
To achieve this, the journal employs the Thai Journals Online (ThaiJO) system as its primary archiving repository. ThaiJO is a robust and secure national electronic journal system developed, managed, and sustainably operated by the Thai-Journal Citation Index Centre (TCI), in strategic collaboration with the National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA) and the National Electronics and Computer Technology Center (NECTEC) of Thailand.

Through this centralized national infrastructure, all articles published in TISR are systematically archived, permanently hosted, and securely backed up, ensuring uninterrupted Open Access for future generations of scholars and researchers.