Publish Your Research as Podcast
with a citable DOI — to ensure it’s visible, preserved, and discoverable worldwide.
Amplifying Voices Across Disciplines
Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences
Why publish as podcast?
Publishing your research as a podcast opens new pathways for academic knowledge to be heard, shared, and applied. Unlike traditional formats that often remain within academic circles, scholarly audio publications make your work accessible to broader audiences: students, educators, practitioners, policymakers, and the wider public; without sacrificing rigor or credibility.
Does it meet academic standards?
With permanent DOIs ensuring citation and scholarly recognition, podcasts combine the integrity of peer-quality research with the immediacy and reach of audio, allowing your ideas to cross disciplines, inform real-world practice, and inspire dialogue far beyond the boundaries of print.
I am ready to publish podcasts!
How does it work?
1. Submit Your Text or Audio
Write your scholarly essay or thesis summary (2,000 to 3,000 words) in the language of your choice and send it to us. Submissions are welcome in all common world languages, including European and non-European.
2. We Generate the Podcast
After a brief editorial review and quality check, we help turn your essay into a podcast; recorded either by you or with our technical production support. If needed, we assist with English translation to maximize accessibility.
3. We Publish it with a doi
We assign your contribution a permanent, citable DOI, publish it on our academic platform, and promote it globally. This helps make your research visible, preserved, and discoverable across disciplines.
Dissertia invites essay contributions for scholarly podcasting that cross disciplinary boundaries and carry international resonance. We welcome work that broadens horizons across the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
Contributions may address, but are not limited to:
- Cultural and Intellectual Traditions: analyses of literature, philosophy, religion, history, linguistics, anthropology, and the arts in their comparative, regional, and global contexts.
- Education and Learning: research on curriculum, pedagogy, teacher formation, learning technologies, higher education, and transformative practices across formal, non-formal, and informal settings; as well as intercultural and religious education, and the use of AI and other technologies in the promotion of learning.
- Ethics, Society, and Politics: critical inquiries into how moral, spiritual, secular, legal, and political worldviews shape public life, civic responsibility, governance, and human rights.
- Economy, Law, and Policy: studies that explore intersections of economics, management, law, public policy, and social justice in shaping institutions and societies worldwide.
- Media, Science, and Technology: explorations of artificial intelligence, digital platforms, journalism, communication, artistic innovation, and scientific advancement in reshaping knowledge, identity, and culture.
- Global Challenges: interdisciplinary reflections on climate change, sustainability, migration, peacebuilding, gender equality, healthcare, poverty, and other pressing planetary concerns.
- Plural Voices and Methods: contributions amplifying underrepresented voices, indigenous perspectives, diverse epistemologies, and innovative methodologies across the arts, humanities, and social sciences.
| Dissertia Podcast Series is committed to making academic podcasting accessible, professional, and affordable for graduate students, early-stage researchers, and established scholars alike. To support editorial work, audio production, digital infrastructure, and DOI registration, we offer two simple tracks: |
Regular Podcast Publication – $20
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Fast-Track Podcast Publication – $50
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Funding Support & Fee WaiversWe believe cost should never be a barrier to amplifying knowledge.
Please reach out to our editorial office to discuss individual support options. |
We’re ready to hear about your research and discuss with you how it could be published as a scholarly podcast
— even if it’s just an idea for now.