探花视频

Humanities publishers Brill and De Gruyter agree merger

Increased scale of new German-Dutch imprint will speed transition to open access publishing and allow more investment in infrastructure

Published on
October 12, 2023
Last updated
October 12, 2023
A pile of journals
Source: iStock

Two leading European publishers of聽humanities and social science research are merging to聽create a聽company covering 800 journals.

Berlin-based imprint De聽Gruyter and the Dutch publisher Brill will form a聽new company, De聽Gruyter Brill, after the German firm agreed a聽deal to聽buy the Leiden business for 鈧51.5聽million (拢45聽million), it聽was on 12聽October.

The new organisation will have combined annual revenues of 鈧134聽million and 750 staff, and will jointly publish more than 3,500 books and 800 journals annually.

The deal creates one of the largest publishers in the humanities, with Brill operating about 280 journals in the humanities, law and social sciences prior to the agreement.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

The Dutch company is one of the world鈥檚 oldest academic publishers, having been founded in 1683, making it slightly older than De聽Gruyter, whose history goes back to聽1749.

However, the transaction 鈥減resents a unique opportunity to accelerate organic growth and achieve necessary scale鈥, said a statement from both companies.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

鈥淭he enlarged scale will accelerate the transition to new business models such as open access and finance investments in technology for end-to-end workflows and a state-of-the-art market-facing (content) platform,鈥 it said.

鈥淚t will enable the company to further improve the author experience as well as services to libraries and institutions worldwide, better face market challenges, allow more effective sales and marketing, and increase the ability to attract and retain talent,鈥 it added, claiming that 鈥渢he strategic rationale鈥 for the merger 鈥渋s聽underpinned by both companies鈥 complementary publishing programs and similar cultural values鈥.

鈥淒e Gruyter and Brill are deeply rooted in the academic community, with long traditions and a shared commitment to publishing excellent research as trusted partners of scholars,鈥 the statement continued.

The newly merged company will be headquartered in Berlin, but Brill鈥檚 office in Leiden, the Netherlands, will 鈥渃ontinue to have material substance, both in number of people and in terms of responsibilities鈥, the statement said.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Amid concerns about value for money and the supposed liberal bias of certain humanities and social science subjects, conservative politicians are increasingly intervening in curricular decisions. Do such subjects still have a place at public universities 鈥 and who should get to decide, asks Paul Basken

12 October

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT