Read, P. (2009). Returning to Nothing: the Meaning of Lost Places. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press

Publishing business concern of the University of Cambridge

Cambridge University Printing
Cambridge University Press logo.svg
Parent company Cambridge University Press & Cess
Status Section of the Academy of Cambridge
Founded 1534; 488 years ago  (1534)
Founder King Henry VIII of England
Land of origin Kingdom of England (since 1534)
Headquarters location Cambridge, England
Distribution
  • Cocky-distributed
  • Ingram Content Grouping (U.s. fulfillment)
  • DHL Supply Chain (UK fulfillment)[i]
Key people Stephen Toope, Peter Phillips
Nonfiction topics Humanities; social sciences; scientific discipline; medicine; engineering and engineering science; English linguistic communication teaching and learning; education; Bibles
Fiction genres academic / educational
Imprints Cambridge Academy Press
Revenue £336 million (2020)
No. of employees three,039; 58% are outside the UK
Official website www.cambridge.org

Logo on the front embrace of "The Victorian Age by William Ralph Inge" used by Cambridge University Press

Cambridge University Printing is the publishing business of the University of Cambridge. Granted letters patent by King Henry VIII in 1534, it is the oldest university press in the world.[2] [3] [iv] [five] Information technology is also the Queen'due south Printer.[6]

Cambridge University Press is a section of the Academy of Cambridge and is both an bookish and educational publisher. With a global sales presence, publishing hubs, and offices in more than twoscore countries, it publishes over fifty,000 titles by authors from over 100 countries.[7] Its publishing includes more 380 academic journals, monographs, reference works, school and university textbooks, and English language teaching and learning publications. It as well publishes Bibles, runs a bookshop in Cambridge, sells through Amazon, and has a conference venues business in Cambridge at the Pitt Building and the Sir Geoffrey Cass Sports and Social Centre.

Being office of the University of Cambridge gives Cambridge University Press a non-turn a profit status. Information technology transfers a minimum of 30% of any almanac surplus back to the University of Cambridge.[8]

History [edit]

Cambridge University Press head office in Cambridge

Cambridge Academy Press edifice in Cambridge

Cambridge University Printing is the oldest university press in the earth. It originated from messages patent granted to the University of Cambridge past Henry VIII in 1534. Cambridge is one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). Authors published past Cambridge have included John Milton, William Harvey, Isaac Newton, Bertrand Russell, and Stephen Hawking.[9]

University printing began in Cambridge when the first practising University Printer, Thomas Thomas, gear up upwards a press house in 1584.[four] The first publication was a book, "Two Treatises of the Lord His Holie Supper".[10] [11] In 1591 the first Cambridge Bible was printed by John Legate and in 1629 Cambridge page edition of the Male monarch James Bible is printed by Thomas and John Cadet.[ten] [eleven]

In July 1697 the Duke of Somerset made a loan of £200 to the academy "towards the printing house and printing" and James Halman, Registrary of the academy, lent £100 for the same purpose.[12]

A new home for the Press, The Pitt Building, on Trumpington Street in the centre of Cambridge was completed in 1833, which was designed by Edward Blore. It became a listed building in 1950.[13]

In the early 1800s the Press pioneers the evolution of stereotype press, assuasive successive printings from one setting.[three] [ten] The press began using steam-powered machine presses by the 1850s. Information technology was in this period that the Press turned down what later became the Oxford English Dictionary – a proposal for which was brought to Cambridge by James Murray before he turned to Oxford.[nine]

The Printing journals publishing plan began in 1893 with the Journal of Physiology and then The Journal of Hygiene and Biometrika. By 1910 the Press had become a well-established journal publisher with a successful list which includes its offset humanities title, Mod Language Review. 1956 sees the first issue of the Journal of Fluid Mechanics.

1895, the first title by a Nobel Laureate is published. Information technology has published 170+ Nobel Prize winners.

1913, the Monotype system of hot-metal mechanised typesetting is introduced at the Press.

1949, the Press opens its first international branch in New York.[4]

The Press moved to its electric current site in Cambridge in 1963, The mid-century modernistic building, Academy Press Business firm, was contructed 1961-3. The building was designed past Beard, Bennett, Wilkins and Partners.[14]

In 1975 the Press launched its English language teaching publishing business.[15]

In 1981 the Printing moved to a new site on Shaftsbury Road. The Edinburgh Edifice was purpose-built with an adjoining warehouse to adapt the Press'south expansion. It was built 1979-80 by International Design and Construction.[14] This site was sold to Cambridge Assessment in 2022 for the structure of The Triangle Building.[ citation needed ]

In 1986 the Press acquired the long-established Bible and prayer-book publisher Eyre & Spottiswoode, which gave the Printing the ancient and unique title of 'The Queen's Printer'.[11]

In 1992 the Press opened a bookshop at 1, Trinity Street, Cambridge which is the oldest-known bookshop site in Uk every bit books had been sold there since 1581.[16] In 2008 the shop expanded into 27 Market Hill where its specialist Pedagogy and English Language Teaching shop opened the following year.[ commendation needed ] The Press bookshop sells Press books every bit well as Cambridge souvenirs such as mugs, diaries, bags, postcards, maps.[17]

In 1993, the Cass Centre was opened to provide sports and social facilities for employees and their families.[fourteen]

1999, Cambridge Dictionaries Online is launched.[15]

In 2012 the Press sold its printing operation to MPG Books Grouping[xviii] and now uses third parties around the world to provide its print publications.

In 2019, the Printing released a new concept in scholarly publishing through Cambridge Elements where authors whose works are either too short to exist printed as a book or too long to qualify as a journal article could take these published inside 12 weeks.[nineteen]

In 2021, Cambridge University Press merged with Cambridge Assessment. The new organisation is called Cambridge University Press & Cess.[20] [21] [22]

Print and typographic heritage [edit]

People [edit]

  • John Siberch, in 1521 the first printer in Cambridge
  • John Baskerville (1707 – 1775), was the offical printer and his Cambridge edition of the King James Bible (1763) is considered his masterpiece
  • Bruce Rogers (1870 – 1957) appointed 'printing adept' at the Press for ii years in 1917
  • Stanley Morison (1889 – 1967) was typographical advisor both to the Printing and to the Monotype Corporation from 1925 to 1954 and, from 1929, besides to The Times newspaper.
  • John Dreyfus (1918 – 2002) joined the Printing in 1939 and became Assistant Printer in 1949.
  • David Kindersley (1915 – 1995), designed a special alphabet, Meliorissimo, for the Press'due south buildings, stationery, signs and vans

Publications [edit]

  • 1584, the Press'due south beginning publication was a book, "Ii Treatises of the Lord His Holie Supper".[10] [11]
  • 1591, the outset Cambridge Bible was printed by John Legate
  • 1629, Cambridge folio edition of the King James Bible is printed by Thomas and John Cadet.[ten] [11]
  • 1633, The Temple by George Herbert (1593 – 1633) includes 'Easter Wings'. The poem's words and lines are arranged on the page to create a visual image of its bailiwick.
  • 1713, the 2nd edition of Isaac Newton's Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica is published by the Printing.
  • 1763, John Baskerville's folio bible, considered a masterpeice, uses his innovations with type, paper, ink, and the printing process.
  • 1895, the kickoff title past a Nobel Laureate is published: J.J. Thomson's Elements of the Mathematical Theory of Electricity and Magnetism.

Current publications [edit]

Open admission [edit]

Cambridge University Press has stated its back up for a sustainable transition to open access.[23] Information technology offers a range of open access publishing options under the heading of Cambridge Open, allowing authors to comply with the Gilded Open Access and Green Open Admission requirements of major research funders. It publishes Gilt Open up Access journals and books and works with publishing partners such as learned societies to develop Open Access for different communities. Information technology supports Green Open Access (likewise called Green archiving) across its journals and monographs, allowing authors to deposit content in institutional and discipline-specific repositories. Information technology also supports sharing on commercial sharing sites through its Cambridge Cadre Share service.

In recent years it has entered into several Read & Publish Open up Access agreements with university libraries and consortia in several countries, including a landmark agreement with the University of California.[24] [25] In its 2022 Annual Report, Cambridge University Press stated that information technology saw such agreements "equally an important stepping stone in the transition to Open Access."[26]

In 2019, the Press joined with the University of Cambridge's research and teaching departments to give a unified response to Plan S, which calls for all publications resulting from publicly-funded research to be published in compliant open up access journals or platforms from 2020. The response emphasized Cambridge's commitment to an open access goal which works effectively for all academic disciplines, is financially sustainable for institutions and high-quality peer review, and which leads to an orderly transition.[27]

The Press is a member of the Open Access Scholarly Publishers Clan and the International Association of STM Publishers.

Nobel prize winners published by Cambridge Academy Press[28] [edit]

JJ Thomson (Physics – 1906)

Ernest Rutherford (Chemistry – 1908)

Niels Henrik David Bohr (Physics 1922)

Werner Karl Heisenberg (Physics – 1932)

Sir Charles Scott Sherrington (Medicine – 1932)

Erwin Schrödinger (Physics – 1935)

James Chadwick (Physics – 1935)

Patrick Maynard Stuart Blackett (Physics – 1948)

Sir John Douglas Cockcroft (Physics – 1951)

Ernest Hemingway (Literature – 1954)

Lord Alexander J Todd (Chemistry – 1957)

Max Ferdinand Perutz (Chemistry –1962)

Eugene Paul Wigner (Physics – 1963)

Max Born (Physics – 1964)

Nicolay Gennadiyevich Basov (Physics – 1964)

Richard P Feynman (Physics – 1965)

Derek HR Barton (Chemistry 1969)

Samuel Beckett (Literature – 1969)

Simon Kuznets (Economics – 1971)

Dennis Gabor (Physics – 1971)

Kenneth J Arrow (Economic science – 1972)

Burton Richter (Physics – 1976)

James Eastward Meade (Economics – 1977)

Sir Nevill Francis Mott (Physics – 1977)

Herbert A Simon (Economics – 1978)

Steven Weinberg (Physics – 1979)

Abdus Salam (Physics – 1979)

James ChaSubramanyan Chandrasekhar (Physics – 1983)

Gerard Debreu (Economics – 1983)

Richard Stone (Economics – 1984)

Franco Modigliani (Economics – 1985)

James M Buchanan Jr (Economics – 1986)

Wole Soyinka (Literature – 1986)

Robert M Solow (Economics – 1987)

Pierre–Gilles de Gennes (Physics – 1991)

Robert W Fogel (Economics – 1993)

Douglass C N (Economics – 1993)

Sir Harold Westward Kroto (Chemistry – 1996)

William Vickrey (Economic science – 1996)

Claude Cohen–Tannoudji (Physics – 1997)

William Phillips (Physics – 1997)

Amartya Sen (Economics – 1998)

Gerardus 't Hooft (Physics – 1999)

Martinus JG Veltman (Physics – 1999)

James J Heckman (Economics – 2000)

George A Akerlof (Economics – 2001)

Joseph E Stiglitz (Economics – 2001)

Daniel Kahneman (Economics – 2002)

Vernon 50 Smith (Economic science – 2002)

Clive WJ Granger (Economic science – 2003)

Anthony J Leggett (Physics – 2003)

Edmund Southward Phelps (Economic science – 2006)

Leonid Hurwicz (Economic science – 2007)

IPCC (Peace Prize – 2007)

Elinor Ostrom (Economics – 2009)

Thomas A Steitz (Chemical science – 2009)

Christopher A Pissarides (Economics – 2010)

Peter A Diamond (Economic science – 2010)

Christopher A Sims (Economic science – 2011)

Alvin Eastward Roth (Economics – 2012)

Angus Deaton (Economics – 2015)

Kip S. Thorne (Physics – 2017)

Joachim Frank (Chemical science – 2017)

William Nordhaus (Economics - 2018)

Organisational governance and operational structure [edit]

Human relationship with the University of Cambridge [edit]

The Pitt Building in Cambridge, which used to be the headquarters of Cambridge University Printing, is at present a briefing venue

Cambridge University Printing is a not-teaching department of the Academy of Cambridge. The Press has, since 1698, been governed by the Printing 'Syndics' (originally known as the 'Curators'),[29] 18 senior members of the University of Cambridge who, along with other non-executive directors, bring a range of subject area and business expertise.[30] The Chair of the Syndicate is currently Professor Stephen Toope (Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge). The Syndicate has delegated its powers to a Printing & Assessment Board; and to an Academic Publishing Committee and an English Linguistic communication Pedagogy & Teaching Publishing Committee.[31]

The Press & Assessment Board is responsible for setting overarching strategic management.[31] The Publishing Committees provide quality assurance and formal approval of the publishing strategy.[31]

The operational responsibleness of the Press is delegated by the Syndics to the Secretary of the Syndicate and Primary Executive.

In 2022 the Academy annouced its conclusion to merge Cambridge University Printing with Cambridge Asssessment.[20]

Operational structure [edit]

Cambridge Academy Press comprises iii publishing groups and a shared services group. These are:

  • Academic Publishing: publishes enquiry books and journals in scientific discipline, engineering, medicine, humanities, and the social sciences.[32] It also publishes advanced learning materials and reference content likewise as 380 journals, of which 43 are 'Gold' Open Admission. Open Access articles now account for fifteen per cent of manufactures.[ citation needed ] The group also publishes Bibles, and the Printing is one of only two publishers entitled to publish the Book of Mutual Prayer and the King James Version of the Bible in England.[33]
  • English Language Teaching: publishes English education courses and resources for learners of all ages around the world.[32] It offers a suite of integrated learning and assessment tools underpinned by the Cambridge Curriculum, a systematic arroyo to learning and evaluating proficiency in English. It works closely with Cambridge Assessment through the joint initiative Cambridge Exams Publishing.
  • Education: delivers educational products, services and software for master, secondary and international schools. It collaborates with Cambridge Cess and the University of Cambridge Faculty of Instruction to help countries such as Kazakhstan and Sultanate of oman to meliorate their instruction systems.[ citation needed ] It likewise works with Cambridge Assessment to reach more schools and develop new products and services that improve teaching and learning. This expanse is merging with the schools team at Cambridge Assessment

Shared Services [edit]

Shared services functions include client services, finance, technology, operations, HR and legal.

Cambridge University Press partnerships and acquisitions [edit]

  • 2011, formed a partnership with Cambridge Assessment to publish official Cambridge preparation materials for Cambridge English language and IELTS examinations.
  • 2015, formed a strategic content and technology partnership with Edmodo, the world's most extensive east-learning platform for primary and secondary teachers and pupils, to bring premier educational content and engineering to schools in the United Kingdom.[34]
  • 2017, the University of Cambridge announced that Cambridge University Printing and Cambridge Assessment would work more closely in future nether governance past the Press & Assessment Board.
  • 2019, with Cambridge Assessment English acquired the Centre for Evaluation and Monitoring from Durham. CEM provides assessments to measure out learner progress and potential, as well as 11 Plus exams for many UK independent and grammar schools.[35]
  • 2020, partnered with Brainwash Ventures, the University College London edtech accelerator, to meliorate understand the challenges and successes of home education during the lockdown.[36]
  • 2020, partnered with online library Perlego to offer students admission to digital textbooks.[37]
  • 2020, the Academy Cambridge appear it would create a 'new unified organization' past merging Cambrige University Press and Cambridge Assessment, to launch 1 August 2021.[38]
  • 2021, Cambridge Cess and Cambridge University Press formally became one arrangement nether the proper noun Cambridge University Press & Assessment.[21]
  • 2021 - aquired CogBooks[39]

Digital developments [edit]

Cambridge University Press sign at the Cambridge HQ

In 2011, Cambridge Academy Press adopted SAP. Cambridge University Press works closely with IT services firm Tech Mahindra on SAP, and with Cognizant and Wipro on other systems.[twoscore] [41]

In 2016, Cambridge Books Online and Cambridge Journals Online were replaced by Cambridge Cadre - a unmarried platform to access its publishing. It provided significantly enhanced interfaces and upgraded navigation capabilities, as well as commodity-level and chapter-level content selection.[42] A yr later on Cambridge Cadre went live, the Press launched Cambridge Cadre Share, functionality to allow users to generate and share links with free admission to selected journal articles, an early sign of the Printing's commitment to open up inquiry.[43]

In 2020, partnered with online library Perlego to offer students access to digital textbooks.[37]

in 2021, the Press aquired CogBooks. The applied science adapts and responds to users, "recommending course material needed to optimise learning".[39]

In 2022 the Press began migrating its website onto Drupal.[44]

Controversies [edit]

Alms for Jihad [edit]

In 2007, controversy arose over the Printing'south determination to destroy all remaining copies of its 2006 book Alms for Jihad: Charity and Terrorism in the Islamic World, by Burr and Collins, every bit part of the settlement of a lawsuit brought by Saudi billionaire Khalid bin Mahfouz.[45] Inside hours, Alms for Jihad became 1 of the 100 near sought subsequently titles on Amazon.com and eBay in the United States. The Printing sent a letter of the alphabet to libraries asking them to remove copies from circulation. The Printing subsequently sent out copies of an "errata" sheet for the book.

The American Library Association issued a recommendation to libraries yet property Alms for Jihad: "Given the intense interest in the book, and the desire of readers to learn about the controversy kickoff hand, we recommend that U.S. libraries keep the book bachelor for their users." The publisher's decision did not have the back up of the book's authors and was criticized by some who claimed it was incompatible with liberty of spoken language and with freedom of the press and that it indicated that English libel laws were excessively strict.[46] [47] In a New York Times Book Review (seven October 2007), U.s.a. Congressman Frank R. Wolf described Cambridge's settlement as "basically a book burning".[48] The Press pointed out that, at that fourth dimension, it had already sold most of its copies of the volume.

The Press defended its deportment, saying it had acted responsibly and that it is a global publisher with a duty to observe the laws of many different countries.[49]

Cambridge University Press v. Patton [edit]

In this case, originally filed in 2008, CUP et al. accused Georgia State Academy of infringement of copyright.[l] The case closed on 29 September 2020, with GSU equally the prevailing party.[51]

The Red china Quarterly [edit]

On eighteen August 2017, following an "educational activity" from a Chinese import agency, Cambridge Academy Press used the functionality that had been built into Cambridge Core to temporarily delete politically sensitive articles from The China Quarterly on its Chinese website. The articles focused on topics Red china regards equally taboo, including the 1989 Tiananmen massacre, Chairman Mao Zedong'south Cultural Revolution, Hong Kong's fight for democracy and indigenous tensions in Xinjiang and Tibet.[52] [53] [54] [55] On 21 August 2017, in the face up of growing international protests, Cambridge Academy Printing announced information technology would immediately repost the manufactures to uphold the principle of academic liberty on which the University's work is founded.[56] [57]

The Cambridge Handbook of Privatization [edit]

In February 2021, the forthcoming Cambridge Handbook of Privatization was found to have included a chapter by John Marking Ramseyer in which he described Koreans murdered in the Kantō Massacre as "gangs" that "torched buildings, planted bombs, [and] poisoned h2o supplies." Editors Avihay Dorfman and Alon Harel acknowledged the historical distortions of the chapter, but gave Ramseyer a chance to revise. Harel described the inclusion of the original affiliate every bit an "innocent and very regrettable" mistake on the part of the editors.[58] [59]

[edit]

[edit]

The Press undertakes community engagement in Cambridge and around the earth where at that place are Press employees. Annually, the Printing selects a UK Charity of the Year, which has included local charities Centre 33 (2016 and 2017), Rowan Humberstone (2018) and Castle School (2019). In 2016, some of the Press's community works included its continued support to Westchester Community Higher in New York, the installation of aseptic facilities in an Indonesian rural school, raising funds to rehabilitate convulsion-stricken schools in Nepal and guiding students from Coleridge Customs Higher, Cambridge in a CV workshop. On Globe Book 24-hour interval 2016, the Printing held a digital Shakespeare publishing workshop for students and their teachers. Similarly, their Indian office conducted a workshop for teachers and students in 17 schools in Delhi to learn the whole process of book publishing. The Printing donated more than 75,000 books in 2016.[60]

An apprenticeship program for people interested in careers in publishing was established in 2016[61] past 2022 it had 200 active apprenices in the UK in a wide range of roles.[62] [63]

Surround [edit]

The Printing monitors its emissions annually, has converted to energy-saving equipment, minimizes plastic use and ensures that their newspaper is sourced ethically.[64]

In 2019, the World Wild animals Fund awarded its highest score to the Press of Three Trees, based on the Press'due south timber purchasing policy, functioning argument and its responsible sourcing of timber.[65] The Press works hard to minimise the number of books that are sent for pulping each year.[ commendation needed ]

The Press won the Contained Publishers Guild Independent Publishing Awards for sustainability in 2022 and in 2021.[66] [67] Its public committments to sustainability include being a signatory of the United nations Global Compact[68] and to the goals of the Cambridge Nothing inititive run by the University of Cambridge - to being carbon zero on all energy-related emissions by 2048.[69]

References [edit]

Citations [edit]

  1. ^ "Cambridge announces tenth successive yr of growth". Cambridge Academy Press . Retrieved 6 Feb 2018.
  2. ^ "Oldest printing and publishing firm". Guinness World Records. 22 January 2002. Archived from the original on 30 January 2016. Retrieved five July 2021. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ a b Black, Michael (1984). Cambridge University Printing, 1583–1984. pp. 328–9. ISBN978-0-521-66497-four.
  4. ^ a b c "A Cursory History of the Printing". Cambridge University Press . Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  5. ^ "About Oxford University Printing". OUP Academic . Retrieved three August 2018.
  6. ^ "The Queen'south Printer's Patent". Cambridge University Press . Retrieved 20 March 2016.
  7. ^ "Press Annual Report". Cambridge University Press & Assessment . Retrieved 1 March 2022.
  8. ^ "University of Cambridge Financial Statements" (PDF).
  9. ^ a b Blackness, Michael (2000). Cambridge Academy Press, 1584–1984. Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-66497-4.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Our Story - Timeline". Cambridge University Press & Assessment . Retrieved 28 Feb 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d e Black, Michael; Blackness, Michael H. (28 March 2000). A Short History of Cambridge Academy Printing. Cambridge University Press. ISBN978-0-521-77572-4.
  12. ^ The Cambridge University Printing 1696—1712 (Loving cup, 1966), p. 78
  13. ^ "CAMBRIDGE University Press (PITT PRESS) University Printing, Not Civil Parish - 1126282 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk . Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  14. ^ a b c "Cambridge University Press | Capturing Cambridge". Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  15. ^ a b "Timeline". Cambridge Academy Press. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  16. ^ "History of the Bookshop". Cambridge University Press Bookshop. 2009. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  17. ^ "Our Bookshop". Cambridge University Press . Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  18. ^ "Cambridge University Printing ends printing after 400 years | The Bookseller". www.thebookseller.com . Retrieved xxx June 2020.
  19. ^ Annual Report for the yr ended 30 Apr 2016 (PDF) , retrieved 25 July 2019
  20. ^ a b "Cambridge Academy Press to bring together with Cambridge Assessment". Academy of Cambridge. 20 October 2020. Retrieved 25 Feb 2022.
  21. ^ a b "Cambridge University Press and Assessment: Our e'er-closer partnership". University of Cambridge. 3 August 2021. Retrieved fifteen February 2022.
  22. ^ Shepard, Gabriel (five Baronial 2021). "Cambridge Academy Press and Cambridge Assessment merge". CambridgeshireLive . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  23. ^ Open Research , retrieved 26 July 2019
  24. ^ UC and Cambridge University Printing Agree to Open Admission Publishing Bargain , retrieved 26 July 2019
  25. ^ Kell, Gretchen (11 April 2019), "Post-Elsevier breakup, new publishing agreement 'a win for anybody'", University of California , retrieved 26 July 2019
  26. ^ Almanac Study 2019, Cambridge Academy Press , retrieved 26 July 2019
  27. ^ Cambridge Submission to cOAlition Southward Consultation on Programme S (PDF) , retrieved 26 July 2019
  28. ^ "Publisher of more than than 170 Nobel Prize Laureates". Cambridge Academy Press & Assessment. 2018.
  29. ^ McKitterick, David (1998). A History of Cambridge Academy Press, Volume two: Scholarship and Commerce, 1698–1872. Cambridge University Press. p. 61. ISBN978-0-521-30802-1.
  30. ^ "Statutes J – The Academy Press" (PDF). University of Cambridge. 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on seven June 2011. Retrieved iv May 2011.
  31. ^ a b c "The Press Syndicate". Cambridge University Printing.
  32. ^ a b Blackness, Michael (2000). A Short History of Cambridge Academy Press. Cambridge University Press. pp. 65–66. ISBN978-0-521-77572-4.
  33. ^ "The Queen's Printers Patent". Cambridge Academy Press Website. Archived from the original on 25 January 2012. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  34. ^ "Edmodo and Cambridge Academy Press Form Strategic Content and Technology Partnership". Cambridge Academy Press . Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  35. ^ "Cambridge Assessment Annual Study 2018-19" (PDF).
  36. ^ "Educate Ventures and Cambridge University Press enter partnership to evangelize major study on dwelling house learning during pandemic". Cambridge University Press . Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  37. ^ a b "Cambridge University Press partners with Perlego on online textbooks | The Bookseller". www.thebookseller.com . Retrieved 16 August 2020.
  38. ^ "Cambridge University Printing merges with Cambridge Assessment | Camrbidge University Press". www.cambridge.org.
  39. ^ a b "Cambridge University Press & Cess acquires CogBooks". The Bookseller . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  40. ^ "CIO interview: Mark Maddocks, Cambridge University Press". ComputerWeekly.com . Retrieved thirty June 2020.
  41. ^ "Tech Mahindra deploys SAP sol for Cambridge University Press". Business Standard India. Press Trust of India. 29 January 2014. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  42. ^ Launching Cambridge Cadre , retrieved 25 July 2019
  43. ^ Sharing Platform Includes Content Usage Records , retrieved 25 July 2019
  44. ^ "Cambridge University Press & Assessment | Acquia". www.acquia.com . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  45. ^ Steyn, Mark (6 August 2007). "One Way Multiculturalism". The New York Sunday. Ronald Weintraub. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  46. ^ Richardson, Anna (3 August 2007). "Bonus Books criticises Loving cup". Thebookseller.com. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  47. ^ Jaschick, Scott (16 August 2007). "A Academy Press stands upward – and wins". Insidehighered.com. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  48. ^ Danadio, Rachel (7 October 2007). "Libel Without Borders". The New York Times . Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  49. ^ Taylor, Kevin (nine August 2007). "Why CUP acted responsibly". The Bookseller . Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  50. ^ Hafner, Katie (16 Apr 2008). "Publishers Sue Georgia State on Digital Reading Thing". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  51. ^ Andrew Albanese |. "Publishers Escape Fee Award equally GSU E-Reserves Example Finally Ends". PublishersWeekly.com . Retrieved 25 Feb 2022.
  52. ^ "《中國季刊》:對中國刪300多篇文章深表關注" [China Quarterly: Deeply concerned about People's republic of china's deletion of more than than 300 articles] (in Chinese). 18 August 2022 – via BBC.
  53. ^ "Cambridge Academy Printing statement regarding content in The China Quarterly". Cambridge University Press . Retrieved 20 August 2017.
  54. ^ Millward, James A. (nineteen August 2017). "Open up Alphabetic character to Cambridge University Printing about its censorship of the China Quarterly". Medium . Retrieved xx Baronial 2017.
  55. ^ Phillips, Tom (xx August 2017). "Cambridge University Press censorship 'exposes Xi Jinping's authoritarian shift'". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved xx August 2017.
  56. ^ Kennedy, Maev; Phillips, Tom (21 August 2017). "Cambridge University Press backs down over China censorship". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  57. ^ "Cambridge University Press reverses Prc censorship mov e". BBC News. 21 August 2017. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  58. ^ Vocal, Sang-ho (20 February 2021). "Harvard professor Ramseyer to revise newspaper on 1923 massacre of Koreans in Japan: Cambridge handbook editor". Yonhap News . Retrieved 22 Feb 2021.
  59. ^ "Controversial Professor Denies Japan's Kanto Massacre of Koreans in 1923". KBS World. 22 February 2021. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  60. ^ Annual Study for the yr ended thirty Apr 2016 (PDF) , retrieved 25 July 2019
  61. ^ Annual Report for the year ended 30 April 2017 (PDF) , retrieved 25 July 2019
  62. ^ "Celebrating National Apprenticeship Week". Cambridge University Printing & Assessment . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  63. ^ "Building the hereafter". Cambridge Academy Press & Cess . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  64. ^ Annual Study for the twelvemonth ended 30 Apr 2018 , retrieved 25 July 2019
  65. ^ WWF Timber Scorecard 2019 , retrieved 25 July 2019
  66. ^ "Independent Publishing Awards". www.independentpublishersguild.com . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  67. ^ "2021 winners". www.independentpublishersguild.com . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  68. ^ "Cambridge University Press & Cess". www.unglobalcompact.org . Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  69. ^ "Environment". Cambridge University Printing & Assessment . Retrieved 25 February 2022.

Sources [edit]

  • Anonymous; The Student's Guide to the University of Cambridge. Third Edition, Revised and Partly Re-written; Deighton Bong, 1874 (reissued by Cambridge University Printing, 2009; ISBN 978-i-108-00491-half-dozen)
  • Anonymous; War Tape of the Cambridge University Printing 1914–1919; Cambridge University Printing, 1920; (reissued by Cambridge University Press, 2009; ISBN 978-1-108-00294-3)
  • A History of Cambridge University Press, Book ane: Printing and the Book Trade in Cambridge, 1534–1698; McKitterick, David; 1992; ISBN 978-0-521-30801-4
  • A History of Cambridge University Printing, Volume 2: Scholarship and Commerce, 1698–1872; McKitterick, David; 1998; ISBN 978-0-521-30802-1
  • A History of Cambridge University Press, Volume 3: New Worlds for Learning, 1873–1972; McKitterick, David; 1998; ISBN 978-0-521-30803-viii
  • A Short History of Cambridge University Press; Black, Michael; 2000; ISBN 978-0-521-77572-4
  • Cambridge University Press 1584–1984; Black, Michael, foreword by Gordon Johnson; 2000; ISBN 978-0-521-66497-iv, Hardback ISBN 978-0-521-26473-0

External links [edit]

  • A Cursory History of Cambridge Academy Press

Coordinates: 52°11′18″N 0°07′55″E  /  52.1882°Due north 0.1320°E  / 52.1882; 0.1320

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambridge_University_Press

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