Editors
Invite an editorDrag a role onto a person, or drag the handle to reorder. Public positions appear on the journal’s board; private ones grant powers only.
A journal’s masthead and its permissions are the same thing seen from two sides. Citeable lets you define the roles your journal actually uses, assign them to people, and publish a board that names the editor-in-chief for DOAJ — all from one screen.
A person’s shown-as title is theirs to choose; the powers come from the role. One person can hold several positions, some public, some back-office only.
Drag a role chip onto a person to grant it, or drag a person to reorder the board. Each position can be public or kept back-office only. Roles are yours to define; the defaults below ship ready to use.
Drag a role onto a person, or drag the handle to reorder. Public positions appear on the journal’s board; private ones grant powers only.
The same people, rendered as a block on the journal’s own site: grouped by role, in your chosen order, with photos, affiliations and country flags. Only the positions marked public appear — the journal manager above is kept back-office, so it isn’t here — and the editor-in-chief is named the way DOAJ expects.
The people who edit and steward the journal.
A design mockup of Citeable’s editorial board & roles. People and affiliations are fictitious.