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CORONAVIRUS UPDATES FROM CHICAGO — Updated 7/20/21

Learn about the actions we've taken to support your teaching and research activities during the novel coronavirus outbreak. If you have feedback or questions, please contact us at [email protected].

Electronic subscription access
As universities continue remote coursework, we encourage librarians to:

  • Contact us at [email protected] to add new institutional and proxy IP ranges that might be used for remote access.
  • Link your Shibboleth entity ID to your University of Chicago Press account so patrons can log in directly through our site. To do so, contact [email protected] with your Shibboleth entity ID. You may also add the ID yourself by logging in to our site with your administrator credentials and visiting your "My Account" page. To add the ID, click "Shibboleth" in the "Institutional Account" menu.

Please contact [email protected] if you, your faculty, or your students experience any connectivity problems while accessing journals remotely. We have and will continue to address these issues quickly.

Subscription renewals
If you are an existing customer and have lost access, please contact us at [email protected] and we will address the issue as quickly as possible.

Subscription payments
During this time, we may experience delays and limitations while processing payments submitted by mail or by phone. With that in mind, we encourage you to submit your payment through our website using the instructions on your renewal form. Institutions may also submit payment by wire.


Financial Institution: The Northern Trust Bank, 50 S. LaSalle Street, Chicago, IL 60603
Account Name: University of Chicago Press Bank 3
Account Number: 2725681
Routing Number: 071000152
SWIFT#: CNORUS44

Once payment is made, please let us know at [email protected]. If you have questions, please contact our team by email at [email protected].

Claims
We are actively processing claims and back-issue orders. Our warehouse is open and we are operating on a normal shipping schedule.

Copyright and fair use
In accordance with our normal practice, we will continue to allow all reuse of our content that falls under fair use provisions.

Technology
Our content platform provider has worked aggressively to ensure business continuity in the face of a COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to expanding our federated access, we now support Campus Activated Subscriber Access (CASA) for off-campus users of Google Scholar.  We have also partnered with the IP Registry to ensure we have the most up-to-date IP address information for our customers. If you experience a problem with access, please email us at [email protected].

Chicago Emerging Nations Initiative (CENI)
As always, we offer free electronic access and deeply discounted print subscriptions to our entire list of journals for qualified higher education and research institutions in developing countries. Through the Chicago Emerging Nations Initiative, we partner with established programs that share our mission to broaden access to knowledge and nourish the intellectual exchange on which it thrives. Together we provide access to institutions in more than 125 developing countries.

Please contact our partners directly for eligibility and registration information about each program.

CORONAVIRUS RESEARCH

The following articles and book reviews about coronaviruses have been published in University of Chicago Press Journals. They are now free to read on our site.

Articles

Free icon Boots for Achilles: Progesterone's Reduction of Cholesterol Is a Second-Order Adaptation, Dorsa Amir and Daniel M. T. Fessler, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2013 88:2, 97-116

Free icon Handling Stress and Sample Storage Are Associated with Weaker Complement-Mediated Bactericidal Ability in Birds but Not Bats, by Daniel J. Becker, Gábor Á. Czirják, Agnieszka Rynda-Apple, and Raina K. Plowright, Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 2019 92:1, 37-48

Free icon Infection Genetics and the Likelihood of Host Shifts in Coevolving Host-Parasite Interactions, by Virginie Poullain and Scott L. Nuismer, The American Naturalist 2012 180:5, 618-628

Free icon Livestock Revolution and Ghostly Apparitions: South China as a Sentinel Territory for Influenza Pandemics, by Frédéric Keck, Current Anthropology 2019 60:S20, S251-S259

Free icon Principles and Patterns of Bat Movements: From Aerodynamics to Ecology, by Christian C. Voigt, Winifred F. Frick, Marc W. Holderied, Richard Holland, Gerald Kerth, Marco A. R. Mello, Raina K. Plowright, Sharon Swartz, and Yossi Yovel, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2017 92:3, 267-287

Free icon Quantifying Global Drivers of Zoonotic Bat Viruses: A Process-Based Perspective, by Liam Brierley, Maarten J. Vonhof, Kevin J. Olival, Peter Daszak, and Kate E. Jones, The American Naturalist 2016 187:2, E53-E64

Free icon Viral Ecology and the Maintenance of Novel Host Use, by John J. Dennehy, Nicholas A. Friedenberg, Robert D. Holt, and Paul E. Turner, The American Naturalist 2006 167:3, 429-439

Book reviews

Free icon Antiviral Research: Strategies in Antiviral Drug Discovery, by Erik De Clercq, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2011 86:1, 57-57

Free icon A Planet of Viruses by Carl Zimmer, by Kathryn A. Hanley, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2012 87:4, 401-402

Free icon Molecular Biology of the SARS-Coronavirus edited by Sunil K. Lal, by Stuart Siddell, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2012 87:1, 67-67

Free icon SARS: A Case Study in Emerging Infections. By Angela R McLean, Robert M May, John Pattison, and Robin A Weiss, by Deborah R Taylor, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2007 82:2, 186-187

Free icon Viral Fitness: The Next SARS and West Nile in the Making. By Jaap Goudsmit, by Nicholas Komar, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2007 82:3, 274-274

Free icon Zoonoses: Infectious Diseases Transmissible from Animals to Humans. Third Edition. By Hartmut Krauss, Albert Weber, Max Appel, Burkhard Enders, Henry D Isenberg, Hans Gerd Schiefer, Werner Slenczka, Alexander von Graevenitz, and Horst Zahner, by Robin A Weiss, The Quarterly Review of Biology 2004 79:3, 344-345

CONTACT THE
JOURNALS DIVISION

Hours
Monday-Friday
8:30 AM-5:00 PM CT

Email
Subscriptions: [email protected]
Access control: [email protected]

Phone*
U.S. and Canada: (877) 705-1878
International: +1 (773) 753-3347

*Our team is currently working remotely. Voice messages will be forwarded to our staff who will respond via email. Please be sure to include your email address in your voicemail so we can reply as quickly as possible. Or, you can email us directly at [email protected].

Visit virtual exhibits from the University of Chicago Press

VIRTUAL EXHIBITS

We know that you and your colleagues use exhibits to learn about journal news, calls for papers, book releases, and book proposals, so we've built virtual exhibits to help fill the gap created by recent and forthcoming event cancelations. Visit our virtual exhibit webpages to learn more about journal and book discounts, acquiring editors, and our programs in the fields that interest you.

A MESSAGE FROM PRESS DIRECTOR GARRETT KIELY

The coronavirus pandemic has brought unprecedented changes to our lives. But what has not changed during this challenging time is our belief in the power of books and scholarship to both inform and comfort, and our dedication to the many constituencies—authors, students, professors, client publishers, libraries, society partners, and bookstores—who share this publishing landscape with us.  [read more]

INFORMATION FROM
OUR JOURNAL EDITORS

The American NaturalistPublishing in the time of Coronavirus, an open letter from the American Naturalist Editors

American Journal of Health EconomicsFast track review for time-sensitive, COVID-19-related health economics research papers

HOPOS: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of ScienceEditor’s Note: Pandemic Response

Isis: A Journal of the History of Science SocietyEditorial response to the pandemic

Journal of the Association for Consumer ResearchFlash COVID-19 Research Issue: Insights on COVID-19 Outbreak and Related Topics

Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists in the time of coronavirus