In the past few days, a new issue of the International Scientific Journal for Contemporary Archival Theory and Practice Atlanti+ was published, which was accepted in Scopus.
The journal Atlanti+ is intended for entry into the Web of Science. It contains the highest quality contributions from events organized in archival science in the past year. "I am pleased that the journal has been accepted into Scopus. The articles published in Atlana+ have international potential," says Peter Pavel Klasinc, head of all archival departments at Alma Mater Europaea and director of the International Institute of Archival Sciences Trieste-Maribor. He adds that Scopus is known as Elsevier's abstract and citation database, the best for peer-reviewed journals. "It covers more than 36,300 titles of peer-reviewed and top research scholarly articles from more than 11,600 publishers, including archival science as an independent, academic, multidisciplinary, and interdisciplinary science. It also enables searching through multidisciplinary bibliographic databases with a citation index," explains Professor Klasinc, who is convinced that there is a lack of archival magazines.
"Atlanti+ has clear goals and areas of application through the magazine's policy, which is aligned with the content of our magazine. The title of the magazine Atlanti+ introduces us to the International Scientific Journal for Contemporary Archival Theory and Practice, which will require even more effort in the future to justify such a title," concludes Professor Klasinc.