Posts in Company news
Sage colleagues named in inaugural 'People of Publishing' campaign

Two Sage employees have been named in the Publishers Association’s first-ever People of Publishing cohort. Delayna Spencer, Senior Commissioning Editor and Sabby Kaur Jivanji, Senior Product Manager join six other publishing professionals across both trade and academic publishing to be honored with this prestigious award.

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A Sage Refresh

Over the next few months, you may notice some changes to our look — our logo, font, colors, imagery, and more — and the way we talk about our company. Sage’s identity as an independent company has always been a guiding principle for how we run our business and support partners like you, and this refreshed brand more effectively infuses this spirit of independence into everything we touch. 

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What are we doing to make journals publishing more inclusive?

Last year, the SAGE Journals team released a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) pledge using a framework from the Royal Society of Chemistry’s joint commitment for action on inclusion and diversity. The pledge aims to ensure that SAGE’s identity, values, and animating principles such as our guaranteed independence and our mission of building bridges to knowledge, are incorporated into our DEI work. In this blog post, Martha Avtandilian, Publisher for SAGE's Social Science Journals division and lead of the Research Pillar's Application Stream, and Jessica Lipowski, Publishing Editor on the STM Journals Editorial team, reflect on our DEI pledge for SAGE Journals a year in and looks ahead to new goals to create more inclusive journals publishing at SAGE.

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Watch the Campaign for Social Science Annual SAGE Lecture 2021

Hutton’s talk, “It’s institutions stupid: The moralisation of capitalism,” is based on the idea that there is widespread agreement that contemporary capitalism needs a reset. Capitalism is not delivering balanced sustainable growth, the source of its legitimacy, while rewards at the top and bottom are wildly out of kilter; dynastic fortunes are being created ossifying our society while monopoly power, extracting ever more economic rent, is growing more prevalent and drains away economic dynamism. This lecture brought together theory, evidence and practice to point the way to a new capitalism.

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