Announcements

24 March 2026
Social Sciences | Interview with Prof. James O. Finckenauer, the Session Chair of the 1st International Online Conference on Social Sciences


Prof. James O. Finckenauer
is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus and Professorial Fellow at Rutgers University, USA, and serves as Session Chair of Session 1. Crime, Policing and Justice. With over 37 years of academic experience, he is a leading expert in organized crime and international criminal justice. He has authored numerous books and publications and has held prominent roles, including President of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences and Director of the International Center at the U.S. National Institute of Justice. His research and teaching have had a global impact, with academic engagements across Europe, Asia, and beyond.

1. Could you please briefly introduce yourself?

My name is James O. Finckenauer, PhD, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers—The State University of New Jersey.

2. What was the primary goal or inspiration for establishing this year’s conference theme?

To present recent research on some of the most cutting-edge social science issues we are facing today, and to provide a forum for new scholars to present their work to a global audience.

3. How do the sessions reflect the most pressing questions or emerging frontiers in the field today?

In inviting submissions, each session chair has delineated a scope of topics to be considered by potential presenters. This range encompasses both pressing questions and emerging frontiers.

4. How do you envision this conference, fostering collaboration or sparking new research directions among attendees?

It will provide an opportunity for scholars—both those who are up and coming, and those who are more established—to present their work to a worldwide audience. Unlike most conferences, which are limited in time and place, and which may entail travel expenses unaffordable to potential attendees, this online conference has none of those limitations. The potential reach is thus unlimited for both presenters and all other participants.

5. In your opinion, what are the most exciting or unanswered questions currently driving research in this field?

In the area of criminology and criminal justice, there is a perennial search for new ideas on how to better prevent and control crime and delinquency. Especially challenging is the evolving nature of crime in areas such as cybercrime and in the use of AI to commit crime, and also in transnational crime (crime that transcends national borders). This search is the underlying basis for the focus on “what works” as the theme of the crime and justice session.

6. What are you most looking forward to at this year’s conference?

A lively discussion and questions that challenge conventional thinking and provoke interest in new areas of research.

7. What are the most important qualities of an outstanding researcher?

Perhaps two of the most important qualities of a good research scientist—and I include any scientist in any subject area—are to be open minded and also to be aware of one’s own biases.

8. Do you have any messages for the participants, young scholars, and future practitioners of this conference?

Yes, try to emulate and adopt those two qualities mentioned just above!

Introduction of IOCSS 2026:

  • Conference date: 28–29 May 2026
  • Deadline for registration: 25 May 2026

Conference chairs:

  • Prof. Daniel McCarthy, (University of Surrey, Guildford, UK);
  • Dr. Lawrence Ho, (National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei City, Taiwan).

More information: https://sciforum.net/event/IOCSS2026.

For any enquiries regarding the event, please get in touch with iocss2026@mdpi.com.

5 June 2026
MDPI Canada | Summary of the MDPI Subject Workshop—Crossing Boundaries: Transdisciplinarity in the Humanities


On 23 May 2026, MDPI Canada hosted their third North American subject workshop entitled “Crossing Boundaries: Transdisciplinarity in the Humanities”. This event brought together nearly 30 students and experts in the field of humanities to explore innovative, cross-disciplinary research shaping the future of the field. This meeting, held at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, located in downtown Toronto, provided a platform for in-depth scientific exchange.

Our workshop host, Summer Huggard, Operations Manager of MDPI Canada, opened the event with an introduction to our conference chair, Prof. Dr. Albrecht Classen of the University of Arizona. Prof. Dr. Classen welcomed our attendees to the event, outlining three subtopics of the workshop: AI and data in the humanities; environmental humanities; and humanities, literature, and identity. These topics emphasize the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration in addressing the direction of the humanities in our rapidly changing world. MDPI Canada’s Operating Director, Elvis Wang, then thanked all contributors and spoke about MDPI’s core principles of transparency, trusted service, integrity, and role in promoting excellence and advancing open science.

The day’s presentations were full of exciting discussion as eleven speakers spoke about their research findings. These eleven presenters included Dr. Michael Bryson, Prof. Dr. Ahmed Elgammal, Prof. Dr. Avi Friedman, Prof. Dr. Nancy S. Steinhardt, Prof. Dr. Tom Roeper, Prof. Dr. Salikoko S. Mufwene, Dr. Lindsay Stern, Prof. Dr. Jeffrey R. Di Leo, Prof. Dr. Albrecht Classen, Dr. Ronald B. Brown, and Dr. Robert Brazeau.

The reports given covered many interesting topics, including the following: AI and data in the humanities; environmental humanities; and humanities, literature, and identity. The talks covered hot topics such as the state of the humanities with the growing prevalence of AI, architecture and urban planning as a tool to understand globalization and exercise habits, the critical role of literature studies in language development, and environmental and health studies.

The second half of the day began with presentations covering the value of the humanities from a philosophical lens, literature and health study to analyze environmental protection, and concluded with an in-depth analysis of the new interconnected approach to human health studies post-pandemic.Dr. Barnaby Crook, Regional Engagement Editor at MDPI, introduced MDPI, market dynamics, and discussed relevant publishing trends in the humanities field. His presentation allowed audience members to gain greater insight into how MDPI’s journals can support researchers whose work falls within this subject and provided transparency regarding MDPI’s practices.

During the day’s proceedings, multiple Q&A sessions were held, allowing valuable engagement between speakers and attendees to occur. During these discussions, attendees could further develop conversations around addressing the influence of culture on human health, the effect of politics on environmental care, the benefits of open access publishing, and more. These sessions were a highlight of the event and helped build a platform for meaningful scientific exchange.

Looking Ahead

The MDPI 2026 Toronto Subject Workshop Crossing Boundaries: Transdisciplinarity in the Humanities was a successful collaboration between MDPI and local academics. We are thankful to all attendees for their part in making this event possible and for contributing to its success.

We have received positive feedback regarding this event and look forward to continuing to host these subject workshops, with the next being the Montreal Subject Workshop “Microelectronics, Microsystems, Sensors, and Their Applications” in September. For more updates regarding this event and other upcoming workshops, follow MDPI Canada on LinkedIn and Facebook. 

5 June 2026
Meet the Editor Series | Featuring Dr. Marcelo J. P. Paixão

Dr. Marcelo Paixão is an Associate Professor at the University of Texas at Austin. He is a faculty member at the African and African Diaspora Studies Department (AADS). Dr. Paixão is a Brazilian economist and holds a PhD in Sociology (IUPERJ, Brazil). Before coming to Austin, he was a Professor of Economics at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) for 16 years, the same place where he majored. Between 2012 and 2013, he was a Visiting Professor at Princeton University, where he was a member of the Project on Ethnicity and Race in Latin America (PERLA). He is the author of several books and articles, among others: A Lenda da Modernidade Encantada (Ed. CRV) 500 Años de Soledad: estudíos sobre las desigualdades raciales en Brasil (Ed. Universidad Nacional de Colombia). 

1. Could you share what drew you to your research field and what motivated you to take on the role of an academic editor for Social Sciences?
My research focuses on ethnic-racial relations, democracy, and development. I am an Afro-Brazilian scholar with a bachelor’s degree in economics and a PhD in sociology, both obtained from leading Brazilian institutions in their respective fields. My work on racial inequalities in Brazil and Latin America has been pioneering and has gained international recognition, which led me to join the University of Texas at Austin in 2015, where I became affiliated with Afro-diasporic and Latin American studies programs.
The initiative to lead the Special Issue “Racial Injustice, Violence, and Resistance: New Approaches under Multidimensional Perspectives”, in partnership with my esteemed colleagues Norma Fuentes-Mayorga (NYU) and Thomas McNulty (University of Georgia), emerged from a shared concern with the central themes of our research and their growing relevance in addressing contemporary global challenges. We were fortunate to bring together a diverse group of international scholars whose work advances emerging research agendas and policy discussions, representing nine countries across three continents.
The Special Issue has been well received within the academic community as exemplified by  96,030 views so far. This reception suggests that the concerns motivating the volume resonate broadly with scholars working on related topics.

2. Your research interests span development economics, racial inequality, and public policy. May I ask what prompted you to apply your economics training to the study of racial and ethnic injustice?
To address this question, it is important to distinguish between the dominant understanding of “economics” in the United States and the Anglo-Saxon world, and its broader conception in Latin America, France, and other intellectual traditions, where the discipline remains closely linked to political economy. This perspective entails a more comprehensive approach to economic problems, incorporating dimensions such as social conflict, income distribution, social hierarchy, political power, and geopolitical dynamics.
This broader framework does not diminish the importance of methodological rigor or the use of quantitative tools and econometrics. Rather, it seeks to complement them with interdisciplinary perspectives and critical analytical approaches.
Within political economy, however, there remains significant resistance to incorporating key dimensions such as gender relations, environmental issues, and, importantly, ethnic-racial dynamics into the analysis of core categories. This limitation is still particularly evident in countries like France, although important advances have been made in Latin America over the past two decades.
My research agenda directly engages with these gaps. I understand ethnic-racial relations—often conceptualized today as racial formations—as central components of distributive conflict and, consequently, of development models. While this perspective must be adapted to different national and regional contexts, its core insights remain valid. The positivist and eugenic legacies that continue to shape dominant conceptions of development and democracy remain hegemonic globally, as postcolonial and decolonial scholarship has consistently emphasized.
These considerations inform my efforts to integrate the study of racism, in its multiple forms, into the field of socioeconomic development.

3. The Special Issue you led, “Racial Injustice, Violence and Resistance: New Approaches under Multidimensional Perspectives”, has garnered significant attention (viewed by 96,030). Could you share with us what initial spark or academic observations inspired you to conceptualize this theme? What kind of discussions or impact did you hope this Special Issue would generate within the relevant research field?
This question overlaps in part with the previous discussion, but it allows me to elaborate further on the broader context that contributed to the Special Issue’s impact.
We are living through a period marked by an increasingly evident convergence of environmental, geopolitical, and social crises. The global order established in the aftermath of World War II has eroded, giving way to a widespread crisis of hegemony that manifests across multiple domains—from international relations to national political systems and even social institutions such as the family.
These dynamics are compounded by recent global shocks, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, alongside the ongoing risk of new crises, including future public health emergencies. At the same time, rapid transformations in information technologies and artificial intelligence—largely controlled by major technology corporations without robust democratic oversight—introduce additional layers of uncertainty and risk, despite their undeniable benefits.
As Antonio Gramsci once wrote, this is the time of the emergence of “terrible things”, today personified by the rise of intolerance, racism, hate speech, and the growth of xenophobia around the world.
In this context, the strong reception of the Special Issue, as evidenced by its wide readership, suggests that it successfully addressed pressing and widely shared concerns that extend beyond academia into broader societal debates.

4. You have served on the Editorial Board of Social Sciences for several years and have successfully led a Special Issue. From this internal perspective, what unique role do you think open access journals like ours play in facilitating academic dissemination and global dialogue on urgent social issues like racial justice? In what areas could we potentially improve?
Serving as co-editor of this Special Issue was a rewarding experience. First, it enabled a highly stimulating collaboration with colleagues of exceptional academic standing around a project of both scholarly and societal significance.
Second, the editorial process itself involves deep engagement with authors’ research agendas and the diverse ways in which their work intersects with broader intellectual concerns. Equally important is the dialogue with reviewers, whose insights often provide invaluable contributions, even when editorial decisions ultimately diverge from their recommendations.
My experience as a volunteer member of the Social Sciences editorial board has likewise been enriching, fostering ongoing dialogue with peers in multiple roles, including reviewers and editorial staff.
Open access journals such as Social Sciences play a crucial role in democratizing knowledge production and dissemination, particularly on urgent issues such as racial justice. They enable broader global access and facilitate more inclusive academic dialogue across regions and institutions.
At the same time, a key challenge for editorial boards lies in strengthening academic impact metrics while also identifying and promoting emerging themes that can shape scholarly debate in meaningful ways.

5. For early career researchers, especially those working in the Global South, who aspire to publish in international journals, particularly in Special Issues addressing social justice topics, what advice would you offer, as a senior scholar and experienced Guest Editor, regarding topic selection, writing, or navigating the peer review process?
To early career scholars from the Global South seeking to internationalize their work, my first recommendation is to undertake a profound intellectual shift: to recognize that the issues they study are not peripheral, but central to both the academic enterprise and the future of humanity.
The contemporary academic system was largely shaped within a Eurocentric framework that positioned certain regions as the primary sources of theory and universal knowledge. Under such a paradigm, the Global South risks being reduced to a site of empirical observation, and its scholars to mere “informants.” Challenging this hierarchy remains an essential task.
This is not a new argument, but it requires constant reaffirmation, as it has yet to become fully hegemonic within global academia.
We are currently facing an unprecedented convergence of crises—environmental, geopolitical, and social—that cannot be adequately understood or addressed through narrow or geographically limited perspectives. The transformations affecting the global order—intensified by recent disruptions such as the COVID-19 pandemic and by technological changes driven by artificial intelligence—demand more inclusive and plural analytical frameworks.
The challenges of our time cannot be resolved through partial or exclusionary approaches that claim universal validity while remaining rooted in specific local experiences. A meaningful response to these global crises will only be possible if scholars from the Global South play a decisive and active role in shaping new intellectual directions and envisioning alternative futures.

Related Special Issue:
Racial Injustice, Violence and Resistance: New Approaches under Multidimensional Perspectives
Guest Editors: Dr. Marcelo Paixão, Dr. Norma Fuentes-Mayorga and Dr. Thomas McNulty

Highlights:

  1. This book offers transnational research from nine countries on racial injustice, far-right nativism, and democratic erosion, while highlighting grassroots resistance and the “periphery's potency”;
  2. It examines how economic precarity, pandemic, and social protection collapse fuel racist ideologies, while showcasing grassroots strategies for socioeconomic and racial justice in Latin America and Brazil;
  3. Despite diverse issues, the collection coheres around policy recommendations linking global governance failures to targeted violence against immigrants and emerging forms of grassroots resilience.

4 June 2026
Open Access, Broadly Recognized: 363 MDPI Journals Receive CiteScores for 2025

The 2025 CiteScore metrics have been officially released by Scopus, and the results confirm what has become a consistent pattern for MDPI's journal portfolio: broad recognition across disciplines, steady improvement across the majority of ranked titles, and a growing presence at the top of subject category rankings.

CiteScore, published annually by Elsevier's Scopus database, measures the average citations received by articles published in a journal over a four-year window. As a complement to the Journal Impact Factor, which uses a two-year window based on the Web of Science database, CiteScore provides an alternative, long-term perspective on citation performance.

The 365 MDPI journals in Scopus (as of May 2026) are indexed across a wide range of subject categories, ensuring that open access research remains highly discoverable to a global readership through one of the most widely used platforms in academic publishing.

Data Summary (2025 CiteScores)

  • New Additions: 41 MDPI journals received a CiteScore for the first time.
  • Trending Upward: 234 of 322 previously ranked journals (73%) saw an increase in their CiteScore compared to last year.
  • High Visibility: 314 journals (86%) rank in Q1 or Q2 in at least one subject category.
  • Elite Performance: 42 journals rank in the top 10% of their subject categories.

Portfolio Performance

Among the 322 journals that held a CiteScore in 2024, 234 saw an increase this year. Quartile improvements outnumbered declines across the portfolio, with 52 journals moving to a higher quartile and only 20 seeing a decline. Furthermore, no previously ranked journals were removed. The 42 journals now ranked in the top 10% of their subject categories are drawn from a strong foundation of 178 journals holding a Q1 position.

With the large majority of our indexed portfolio ranked in the top half of research fields, researchers can confidently choose MDPI to meet funder mandates for high-quality, fully compliant Open Access publishing.

Exceptional Achievements for Foods and Life

Notably, both Foods and Life achieved a 99th percentile ranking in their respective subject categories for the 2025 CiteScores. This outstanding placement positions them as leading journals in their fields and highlights the high visibility and global impact of the open access research they publish.

Journal Metrics and Beyond

Journal-level metrics describe outlets, not individual articles. An increasing number of funders and institutions—including signatories of DORA and the Coalition for Advancing Research Assessment—now explicitly encourage evaluation at the article level rather than by the journal in which research appears. MDPI supports this direction: we report CiteScore alongside the Journal Impact Factor, Journal Citation Indicator, and article-level usage data because no single number captures the full reach and contribution of published research.

Thank You

These results reflect the sustained effort of thousands of editors-in-chief, editorial board members, reviewers, and authors across every field MDPI serves. The metrics are the outcome; the work is yours.

To explore the specific 2025 CiteScore, Impact Factor, and indexing details for your field's journal, please visit the Scopus journals list and go to a journal's Statistics page.

1 June 2026
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO’s Letter #35 – 30 Years of Open Science, Open Access Policies, Spain Summit, MMCS 2026 & Antibiotics 2026

Welcome to the MDPI Insights: The CEO's Letter.

In these monthly letters, I will showcase two key aspects of our work at MDPI: our commitment to empowering researchers and our determination to facilitating open scientific exchange.


Opening Thoughts

30 Years of Open Science, Built Together

This month, we officially launched MDPI’s 30th Anniversary campaign and dedicated anniversary website, marking an important milestone in our journey as an open access publisher. What began in 1996 with a single journal and the simple belief that scientific knowledge should be shared openly and freely has grown into a global publishing organization supporting more than 500 journals, 68,000 Editorial Board Members, and millions of researchers worldwide.

The anniversary page, entitled 30 Years of Open Science, Built Together, reflects on the people, milestones, and partnerships that have shaped MDPI over the past three decades. It includes a retrospective of our development, key moments in the evolution of open access, landmark research articles, journal anniversaries, an interview with the CEO, and perspectives from colleagues and partners who have contributed to our success.

Looking back, one of the most striking aspects of our journey is not simply our growth, but the broader transformation of scholarly publishing itself.

Open access has moved from a niche concept to a widely adopted publishing model, helping make research more accessible, discoverable, and impactful for researchers, institutions, policymakers, and society.

MDPI has been part of this transition and continues to invest in the people, technology, partnerships, and research integrity infrastructure needed to support high-quality open science at scale.

While anniversaries naturally encourage reflection, they are also an opportunity to look ahead. The challenges facing scholarly publishing today, including research integrity, artificial intelligence, accessibility, and global participation in science, will require continued collaboration across the research ecosystem. As we celebrate 30 years of publishing, our focus remains on supporting researchers, strengthening trust in open science, and helping shape the future of scholarly communication together.

I encourage you to visit the anniversary page, explore the milestones, and take a moment to reflect on the role each of us has played in contributing to MDPI’s story.

Thank you for being part of this journey.

Impactful Research

Highlights from MMCS 2026 in Beijing (14-17 May)

From 14–17 May, MDPI hosted The 5th Molecules Medicinal Chemistry Symposium (MMCS 2026) in Beijing, China, bringing together academia and industry to explore advances in chemical biology, medicinal chemistry, and drug discovery.

The conference hosted more than 230 attendees from 37 countries and regions, alongside 257 submissions and 145 accepted abstracts. With a significant increase in attendance – up by 100 participants compared with the previous edition – the popularity of MMCS continues to grow in terms of its international profile and scientific relevance within this rapidly evolving field.

The scientific program covered seven themes:

  • Chemical Biology for Drug Discovery
  • Medicinal Chemistry Research Progress
  • Natural Products in Drug Discovery
  • AI-enabled Drug Discovery
  • GPCR & Ion Channel Targeted Drug Development
  • Innovative Proximity-Based Drug Modalities
  • Biocatalysis for Natural Product & Drug Synthesis

The event featured three plenary speakers, 14 keynote speakers, 35 selected oral presentations, and 98 poster presentations, creating opportunities for open scientific exchange and collaboration. Conference Chair Prof. Dr. Diego Muñoz-Torrero described this edition as one of the most successful MMCS events to date.

Thanks to our Sponsors

MMCS 2026 secured sponsorship support from 12 industrial partners, 11 of which set up on-site exhibition booths. Covering biopharmaceutical R&D, life science supplies, pharmaceutical experimental instruments, and industrial service sectors, exhibitors were able to connect their businesses directly with attendees and make connections at the conference.

30th Anniversary Celebration of Molecules

During the conference, we also celebrated the 30th anniversary of Molecules, one of MDPI’s flagship journals. The celebration brought together Section Editors-in-Chief, Editorial Board Members, MDPI leadership, and editorial colleagues to reflect on the journal’s development, achievements, and continued future growth.

Events such as MMCS 2026 highlight the important role conferences play in creating scientific exchange and collaboration, and in connecting our research communities in person.

They also reflect the continued development of MDPI’s conference portfolio and our commitment to supporting academic engagement beyond publishing alone. Thanks to everyone involved in organizing and contributing to the success of this event.

Inside MDPI

Open Access Policies Continue to Accelerate Globally

One of the clearest indicators of the continued momentum behind open access is the growing number of national and institutional policies supporting, and increasingly requiring, open dissemination of research.

Around the world, governments, funding agencies, and universities are building their open access mandates, with increasing focus on transparency, rights retention, and public accessibility of publicly funded research. While these policies vary across regions, the broader direction is clear: expectations around openness and compliance continue to accelerate.

For researchers, navigating these evolving requirements can be complex and time-consuming. Supporting the research community therefore means not only publishing high-quality open access content but also helping stakeholders better understand changing requirements and emerging opportunities. At MDPI, we see this as an important part of our role within scholarly communication.

“Expectations around openness and compliance continue to accelerate”

Through the MDPI Blog, our Content team continues to publish monthly articles overviewing different countries’ relationships with open access, exploring their histories, policies, opportunities, and statistics. All this information is centralized into an article which contains brief summaries of each country, with links to all the full articles, and is updated monthly.

Recent Policy Developments

South Africa

In 2026, South Africa’s Department of Science and Innovation introduced the South African Open Science Policy. The policy states that: “Open access shall be required for publications arising from publicly funded research, and desirable for research from all sources of funding.”

The policy envisions a coordinated and broad approach to open science that will sustainably and ethically drive socio-economic development by increasing the practice of open science through policy, training, incentivization, and infrastructure.

Canada

In Canada, the Tri-Agency OA Policy on Publications was revised, removing the 12-month embargo for research that must be deposited in a repository with an open license and with author rights retained.

The Agencies argue that “societal advancement is made possible through widespread and barrier-free access to cutting-edge research and knowledge.”

Chile

Chile is a collaborative and engaged member of the global open access movement.

The National Research and Development Agency (Agencia Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo, or ANID) is Chile’s main funding agency for R&D. It mandates that all beneficiaries must deposit the final version of their published scientific output, with an embargo period of up to 12 months, into a repository.

ANID also supports the InES Open Science funding program, which allows universities to request funding for capacity and infrastructure building. Further, Chile is an active participant in various international initiatives, such as Redalyc, SciELO, and Red de Repositorios Latinoamericanos.

Openness Beyond Research

At MDPI, openness remains one of our core values, ensuring that research outputs are freely accessible to anyone. This commitment also extends to sharing knowledge about the scholarly publishing landscape itself, which we practice on the MDPI Blog through various topics, including open access, recent advances in science, and opportunities for researchers.

As the open access landscape continues to evolve, helping researchers, institutions, editors, and partners navigate these changes will remain an important priority for us.

Thank You

I would like to thank Jack McKenna (Senior Content Specialist, MDPI) from our Content team for his ongoing work on the MDPI Blog series covering global open access policy developments. Initiatives such as this help make complex policy discussions more accessible and useful to the wider research community.

Coming Together for Science

Reflections from the MDPI Spain Summit 2026 in Valencia (21 May)

On 21 May, we hosted the MDPI Spain Summit 2026 in Valencia.

The Summit brought together 30 Editorial Board Members and MDPI colleagues for a discussions on the future of publishing, research integrity, peer review, artificial intelligence, and the evolving research landscape in Spain.

We hosted participants from leading Spanish institutions and spoke on the importance of Spain as a major contributor to global open access (OA) research. In 2025 alone, Spain ranked among the leading countries worldwide for OA publishing, with more than 85% of publications made openly accessible. MDPI also continues to play a significant role within the Spanish research ecosystem.

MDPI in Spain

Spain remains one of MDPI's most important academic markets and a leading contributor to OA research globally. Ever since our Barcelona office opened in 2016 (Happy 10th Anniversary!), MDPI Spain has been actively supporting researchers, institutions, societies, and academic partners across the country. Today, the office plays an important role in creating engagement with the Spanish scholarly community through editorial support, partnerships, conferences, training initiatives, and outreach activities.

A cluster of high-level indicators highlight both the strength of the local research ecosystem and MDPI’s role within it:

  • 43,218 total publications in Spain in 2025, of which 35,728 (83%) were open access (49% Gold OA).
  • 211,200+ total publications (2021–2025), with 84% published open access.
  • 13,444 MDPI publications from Spanish institutions in 2025, representing 14% of all open access publications in Spain.
  • More than115,100 MDPI publications from Spanish institutions since 1996.
  • More than 4,500 Editorial Board Members from Spain, including more than 150 Chief Editors and 57 Associate Editors.
  • 42 institutional partners participating in MDPI’s Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP).
  • Spain ranks second globally for MDPI society affiliations, with 26 affiliated society agreements currently in place.

Program Overview

What made this summit special was the openness of the discussions around the research landscape in Spain and the role MDPI plays within the market. General topics of the presentations included:

  • MDPI Introduction – Stefan Tochev (CEO).
  • Engagement with the Academic Community – Dr. Marta Colomer (External Affairs Lead).
  • Latest Developments in the Editorial Process – Dr. Jordi Martinez (Deputy Managing Editor).
  • Research integrity and Publication Ethics – Slavomir Nikodijevic (Research Integrity Specialist).
  • A 360 View of Academic Publishing – Prof. Dr. Luis Angel Ruiz Fernandez (EBM of Remote Sensing).

Panel Discussion

We also hosted a panel discussion moderated by Marta, entitled “The Future of Academic Publishing” with Prof. Luis Ruiz, Prof. Marta Feliz (EBM of the journal Catalysts), Dr. Enric Sayas (Product Owner, AI & Technology Innovation), and myself. The discussion looked at the evolving role of editors, the future of peer review, and the growing importance of maintaining trust, ethics, and research integrity in an era increasingly influenced by artificial intelligence.

Themes from the Summit

Several themes emerged throughout the discussions, reflecting broader conversations taking place across publishing:

  • The academic community values efficient publishing workflows, but expectations around scientific quality and editorial rigor continue to rise.
  • Reviewer fatigue and long-term sustainability of peer review remain major challenges across the industry.
  • AI is rapidly changing scholarly communication and requires transparent and responsible governance.
  • Reputation and trust continue to depend on long-term engagement, transparency, and quality-focused decision-making.

“Maintaining an open dialogue with researchers, editors, reviewers, and institutions remains a priority for MDPI”

It was constructive to see the willingness of participants to engage directly and candidly with us. These conversations provide insights that help inform how we continue to develop our editorial processes, engagement activities, and support for the research community. While certain discussions included concerns, there was also recognition that open dialogue between publishers and the research community is essential if we want to improve scholarly communication together.

Events such as this are increasingly important for MDPI. They allow us to present our perspective, to listen to the experiences, expectations, and concerns of editors, reviewers, and researchers, and to address these accordingly.

Thank You

Thank you to our Barcelona Office and all colleagues involved in organizing the summit, as well as all participants for contributing to these thoughtful and constructive discussions.

As publishing continues to evolve, maintaining an open dialogue with researchers, editors, reviewers, and institutions remains an important priority for MDPI. Events such as the Spain Summit play an important role in helping us to build relationships, foster trust, and better understand the needs of our community.

Closing Thoughts

Highlights from Antibiotics 2026 in Barcelona (11–14 May)

This week, MDPI hosted the Antibiotics 2026 — Advances in Antimicrobial Action and Resistance conference in Barcelona, bringing together academics and industry experts to discuss one of the most important scientific and public health challenges of our time: antimicrobial resistance.

The conference welcomed 145 attendees from 42 different countries and territories, alongside 265 submissions and 127 accepted abstracts, showing the international reach of the event and the strong scientific interest in this rapidly evolving field.

Scientific Exchange on a Global Challenge

Antimicrobial resistance continues to be a global concern, creating collaboration across disciplines, institutions, and regions. The conference program focused on a range of topics including:

  • Antimicrobial resistance mechanisms
  • One Health approaches to antimicrobial stewardship
  • Discovery of novel antimicrobial agents
  • Innovation in clinical strategies and treatment approaches
  • Ethnopharmacology and emerging therapies

Through keynote plenaries, invited lectures, oral presentations, and poster sessions, the conference created a platform for dialogue and scientific exchange.

International Participation and Collaboration

One of the highlights of the event was the diversity of participation across both geography and expertise. Researchers and speakers from Europe, North America, Asia, Africa, Australia, and Latin America took part in discussions throughout the conference, highlighting the global nature of both the challenge and the scientific response.

The scientific program included:

  • 2 keynote speakers
  • 10 invited speakers
  • 36 selected talks
  • 78 posters

The conference brought together perspectives from academia, healthcare, and industry, helping facilitate interdisciplinary collaboration around future approaches to antimicrobial research and resistance management.

The Role of Conferences in Scholarly Communication

Conferences are an important platform for collaboration, scientific exchange, and community-building. Events such as Antibiotics 2026 show the value of bringing researchers together in person to discuss emerging challenges, share new findings, and strengthen international networks across disciplines and regions.

Thank You

I would like to thank the conference chairs, speakers, participants, sponsors, and the entire MDPI conference team for their work in making this event a success. The engagement and positive feedback from attendees highlight the importance of our events in addressing some of the most pressing scientific challenges facing society today.

Stefan Tochev
Chief Executive Officer
MDPI AG

22 May 2026
Meet Us at the 31st International Congress of Applied Psychology (ICAP), 21–25 July 2026, Florence, Italy


Conference: 31st International Congress of Applied Psychology (ICAP)
Date: 21–25 July 2026
Location: Florence, Italy

MDPI will be attending the 31st International Congress of Applied Psychology as an exhibitor. We welcome researchers from different backgrounds to visit and share their latest ideas with us.

ICAP is the flagship congress of the International Association of Applied Psychology (IAAP), an association born more than 100 years ago. As our world becomes increasingly connected and complex, the need for international psychology grows. IAAP serves as a professional home for applied psychologists wishing to expand their international knowledge base and network. IAAP’s mission is to promote the science and practice of applied psychology and to facilitate interaction and communication among applied psychologists around the world. ICAP plays a key role in this mission.

The following open access journals will be represented at the conference:

If you are planning to attend the above conference, please do not hesitate to contact us. Our delegates look forward to meeting you in person and answering any questions that you may have.

For more information about the conference, please visit the following website: https://www.icap2026.org/.

14 May 2026
International Day of Families—“Families, Inequalities and Child Wellbeing”, 15 May 2026


The International Day of Families is observed on 15 May every year. The Day was proclaimed by the UN General Assembly in 1993 with resolution A/RES/47/237 and reflects the importance the international community attaches to families. The International Day provides an opportunity to promote awareness of issues relating to families and to increase knowledge of the social, economic, and demographic processes affecting families.

The theme of the 2026 observance, “Families, Inequalities and Child Wellbeing”, underscores how widening inequalities are shaping family life and influencing children’s futures. It calls for stronger investment in integrated, family-oriented policies to reduce disparities and support healthy child development.

In recognition of the International Day of Families, MDPI reaffirms its commitment to advancing high-quality research and protecting the integrity of family-centered studies. Through open access publishing, we support the dissemination of knowledge in the Social Sciences and Humanities—ensuring that critical insights into reducing inequalities and fostering child well-being are accessible to all, and empowering scholars to contribute to the ongoing evolution of equitable family structures and social progress.

 

 

 

Keynote Speakers:

Dr. Pan Wang
University of New South Wales, Australia

Prof. Dr. John Bartkowski
University of Texas at San Antonio, USA

Ms. Katherine Klee
University of Texas at San Antonio, USA

Prof. Dr. Joseph G. Grzywacz
San José State University, USA

Dr. Sampson Blair
University of Santo Tomas, Philippines

Dr. Sviatlana Karpava
University of Cyprus, Cyprus

Free to register for this webinar here!

“Caravans of Care”: Religiosity, Meaning in Life, and Family Functioning in Parental Burnout
by Wioletta Tuszyńska-Bogucka and Roman Ryszard Szałachowski
Religions 2026, 17(2), 147; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17020147

The Family in the Mirror: Generational Values and Attitudes of the Portuguese Regarding the Family
by Eduardo Duque and José F. Durán Vázquez
Religions 2025, 16(9), 1151; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091151

The Long Arm of the Family: Family Role in Partner Selection Among Male Refugees in Germany
by Irena Kogan, Jana Kuhlemann and Amrei Perleth
Populations 2025, 1(2), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/populations1020013

Effect of Intensive Parenting Attitude on Maternal Well-Being and Self-Efficacy Among Japanese Housewives and Part-Time Working Mothers
by Sonoko Egami
Psychol. Int. 2025, 7(2), 47; https://doi.org/10.3390/psycholint7020047

Fuzzy Non-Payment Risk Management Rooted in Optimized Household Consumption Units
by Gregorio Izquierdo Llanes and Antonio Salcedo
Risks 2025, 13(4), 74; https://doi.org/10.3390/risks13040074

Barriers and Facilitators in Reaching and Supporting Parents with Intellectual Disabilities
by Maroesjka Van Nieuwenhuijzen, Sanna Koet and Marcia Lever
Disabilities 2025, 5(2), 35; https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities5020035

Fathers, Families, and Society: A Two-Decade Systematic Literature Review on the Contexts and Consequences of Paternity and Parental Leave for Fathers
by Stéfanie André, Nola Cammu and Eline Meuleman
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(3), 168; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14030168

Contextualised, Not Neoliberalised, Approaches to Families in Five Countries: Quality and Practice
by Marg Rogers, Fabio Dovigo, Astrid Mus Rasmussen, Khatuna Dolidze and Laura Doan
Soc. Sci. 2024, 13(12), 695; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13120695

The Role of Family Functioning in Over-Adaptation and Subjective Well-Being Among Japan’s Youth: The Moderating Effect of Gender Differences and Rumination
by Mengting Zhang and Hiroshi Utsunomiya
Youth 2024, 4(4), 1787-1799; https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4040113

Systematic Assessment of Family Service Barriers to Support Youth Engagement with Health and Social Care
by Jeffrey Waid, Courtney Kutzler and Olivia Tomfohrde
Youth 2024, 4(3), 1364-1373; https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030086

Public Policy and Family Economic Stability: Fostering Security in Macroeconomic Instability
Guest Editors: Dr. Dylan Bellisle and Dr. Renada Goldberg
Deadline for submissions: 30 September 2026

Caregiving in Families of Adults with Disabilities
Guest Editors: Prof. Dr. Tamar Heller and Dr. Sumithra Murthy
Deadline for submissions: 30 November 2026

Family Contexts and STEM Identity Development in Childhood
Guest Editors: Dr. Remy Dou and Dr. Heidi Cian
Deadline for submissions: 7 January 2027

Creating a Robust Spirituality in Family and Relational Life in a Challenging World
Guest Editor: Prof. Dr. Suzanne Coyle
Deadline for submissions: 15 February 2027

8 May 2026
MDPI Webinar | International Day of Families, 15 May 2026


MDPI is pleased to announce a special webinar in celebration of International Day of Families on 15 May 2026. This event aims to raise awareness of the vital role families play in society and explore the social, economic, and demographic factors that influence family well-being across the world. It also seeks to highlight the importance of family-oriented policies in promoting equality, supporting child development, and fostering sustainable social progress.

Date: 15 May at 4:00 p.m. CEST | 10:00 p.m. CST Asia | 9:00 a.m. CDT
Webinar ID: 851 6580 3522

Register now for free.

Program

Speaker Presentation Title Time in CEST Time in CST (Asia) Time in CDT
  MDPI Introduction 4:00–4:05  p.m. 10:00–10:05 p.m. 9:00–9:05 a.m.
Dr. Pan Wang Parental Matchmaking in China: Stratified Resources, Marriage Opportunities, and Child Well-being 4:05–4:25 p.m. 10:05–10:25 p.m. 9:05–9:25 a.m.
Prof. Dr. John Bartkowski and Ms. Katherine Klee Breastfeeding as a Collective Achievement: Families, Communities, and Lactation Outcomes in Early Childhood 4:25–4:45 p.m. 10:25–10:45 p.m. 9:25–9:45 a.m.
Prof. Dr. Joseph G. Grzywacz Beyond the “Sponge Concept”: Toward an Ontology of F-A-M-I-L-Y in Family Science 4:45–5:05 p.m. 10:45–11:05 p.m. 9:45–10:05 a.m.
Dr. Sampson Blair Changing Marriage and Fertility Aspirations: An Examination of Young Adults in the Philippines 5:05–5:25 p.m. 11:05–11:25 p.m. 10:05–10:25 a.m.
Dr. Sviatlana Karpava Navigating Displacement: Perceptions, Challenges, and Resilience of Transnational Ukrainian Refugee Families in Cyprus 5:25–5:45 p.m. 11:25–11:45 p.m. 10:25–10:45 a.m.
  Q&A 5:45–6:00 p.m. 11:45–12:00 p.m. 10:45–11:00 a.m.
  Webinar Closing 6:00–6:05 p.m. 12:00–12:05 am 11:00–11:05 a.m.

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information on how to join the webinar. Registrations with academic and institutional email addresses will be prioritized.

Unable to attend? Register anyway, and we will let you know when the recording is available to watch.

Webinar Keynote Speakers:

  • Dr. Pan Wang, Associate Professor, Chinese and Asian Studies, Deputy Education Convenor, HAL;
  • Prof. Dr. John Bartkowski, Department of Sociology and Demography, University of Texas at San Antonio; San Antonio, Texas, United States;
  • Ms. Katherine Klee, Lead Evaluator, Bartkowski & Associates Research Team; San Antonio, Texas, United States;
  • Prof. Dr. Joseph G. Grzywacz, Associate Dean of Research, College of Health and Human Sciences, San Jose State University;
  • Dr. Sampson Blair, University of Santo Tomas, Manila, Philippines;
  • Dr. Sviatlana Karpava, Associate Professor, Chinese and Asian Studies, Deputy Education Convenor, HA Department of English Studies, University of Cyprus, Cyprus.

6 May 2026
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO's Letter #34 - MDPI US Office, Coatings 2026, Media and Partnerships, Recapping Poland Summit & Serbia Salon

Welcome to the MDPI Insights: The CEO's Letter.

In these monthly letters, I will showcase two key aspects of our work at MDPI: our commitment to empowering researchers and our determination to facilitating open scientific exchange.


Opening Thoughts

MDPI Opens First US Office in Philadelphia

I am delighted to highlight an important milestone in MDPI’s continued global development: the recent opening of our first office in the United States, located in Philadelphia.

This marks a significant step in building our engagement with one of the world’s most important research communities. The new office will serve as a hub for supporting scholars across the US, creating closer connections and more localized support.

As highlighted in recent coverage by our press release in InPublishing, this expansion reflects MDPI’s broader commitment to growing our international presence while remaining focused on the needs of the research community.

A Key Market for Research and Collaboration

The United States continues to play a central role in global research. To date, MDPI has published more than 237,000 articles affiliated with US institutions, and we collaborate with nearly 12,000 Editorial Board Members across the country. These relationships are fundamental to our mission of supporting Open Access and advancing scientific communication.

The opening of this office is not just about geography; it is about proximity to the communities we serve. It allows us to better understand the evolving needs of researchers while continuing to build collaboration and trust within the academic ecosystem.

The Team Behind this Milestone

This milestone reflects the efforts of teams across MDPI. I extend a special thank-you to Bob Vrooman (Head of Business Development, MDPI), who is leading this expansion, as well as to our colleagues in Toronto and across our North American teams for their continued support.

Bob shared: “MDPI is already a trusted partner of the North American research community, due in no small part to our dedicated team in Canada. Launching our first US office in Philadelphia is a great first step towards expanding MDPI’s market share and recognition in the US. I’m thrilled to be a part of this new phase in MDPI’s journey.”

As we continue to grow, our focus remains on supporting researchers globally and advancing Open Access with integrity.

Impactful Research

Coatings 2026: Highlights from Our Latest MDPI Conference (20-22 April)

I am pleased to share the successful completion of MDPI conference Coatings 2026, which took place last week in Athens from 20 to 22 April 2026. This conference brought together a diverse international community of researchers, industry experts, and partners, highlighting MDPI’s role not only as a publisher but also as a platform for scientific exchange and collaboration.

Conference Highlights

Coatings 2026 in numbers:

  • The event attracted approximately 140 participants from 25 countries
  • 143 submissions and a strong scientific program of talks and posters
  • 2 keynote speakers and a wide range of invited contributions
  • 7 sponsors and 11 media partners supporting the event

Scientific Programme

The program centered on “Safe and Sustainable by Design,” reflecting the growing importance of sustainability, regulatory frameworks, and technological innovation in materials science. Topics ranged from advanced coating technologies and additive manufacturing to AI-driven simulations and strategies to phase out potentially harmful substances in industrial processes.

Importantly, the conference brought together both academic and industrial perspectives, creating a space for dialogue on how research can translate into real-world impact. This is important as industries navigate environmental challenges, evolving regulations, and the need for more sustainable and circular approaches to production.

Thank You!

I would like to thank the entire conference team for their work in organizing this successful event. As we continue to grow, conferences like this play an important role in building our connection with global research communities, supporting interdisciplinary collaboration, and positioning MDPI at the intersection of science, technology, and societal impact.

Members from Exelisis and MDPI EU Conference & Social Media team at the Coatings 2026 Conference in Athens, Greece.

Inside MDPI

Recent Media Coverage and Partnerships

Over the past two months, news from MDPI has enjoyed strong visibility across international publishing and academic media, reflecting our continued expansion and the increasing relevance of our work within the research community.

Below are some highlights covering partnerships, institutional agreements, and milestones that continue to shape our position in publishing – some of which are featured in leading industry platforms such as InPublishing, which is highly selective and reflects the growing recognition of MDPI’s growth within the publishing ecosystem.

Key Press Releases & Coverage (March–April 2026)

  • MDPI × Sikt (Norway): Partnership Renewal

    We renewed our national Open Access agreement with Sikt, a key consortium partnership, continuing to support researchers across Norway through this partnership. The renewal was covered by several international publishing trade outlets.

    Covered by: Research Information, STM Publishing News, ALPSP, Europe Says

  • MDPI × Jisc (UK): New Two-Year Open Access Agreement

    A new two-year agreement with Jisc significantly expands MDPI’s footprint across UK academic institutions. Coverage appeared across major publishing industry titles in the UK and internationally.

    Covered by: InPublishing, Research Information, STM Publishing News, ALPSP

  • MDPI Opens First US Office

    The opening of our first US office marks an important milestone in our North American expansion to build engagement with one of the world’s leading research communities.

    Coverage by: EurekAlert!, InPublishing, EdTech Innovation Hub, STM Publishing News, ALPSP

  • MDPI × SIGG: Italian Society of Gerontology and Geriatrics

    We established a new partnership with the Italian Society of Gerontology and Geriatrics (SIGG), adding to our growing portfolio of society collaborations.

    Coverage by: EurekAlert!, STM Publishing News, ALPSP

  • MDPI × Fast Track Health: New Journal Launch

    The launch of a new journal in partnership with Fast Track Health reflects our continued expansion into emerging areas of health innovation.

    Coverage by: EurekAlert!, Scienmag, STM Publishing News, ALPSP

  • MDPI 2025 Annual Report

    Our 2025 Annual Report was also widely covered across international media, highlighting a 12% increase in submissions and continued investment in research integrity, infrastructure, and partnerships.

    Coverage by: EurekAlert!, Research Information, STM Publishing News, ALPSP, Choice 360

Coverage also spanned multiple regions including Poland, Romania and South Korea, reflecting our ongoing efforts to communicate more effectively with regional research communities.

Looking Ahead

This coverage shows that MDPI is growing and building on its position through partnerships, visibility, and engagement across regions. As we continue to expand, our focus remains on supporting researchers globally, building on our institutional collaborations, and advancing Open Access with integrity.

Thank you to all teams involved in delivering these initiatives, and to our External Affairs team for ensuring our work is effectively communicated across the global publishing landscape!

Coming Together for Science

Recapping MDPI Poland Summit 2026 in Krakow (23 April)

On 23 April 2206, we hosted the first MDPI Poland Summit 2026 in Kraków, bringing together an engaged group of editors, researchers, and academic leaders from the country.

The Poland Summit welcomed some 45 participants, including Editors-in-Chief, Associate Editors, and Editorial Board Members, many with strong academic track records and international recognition.

Our engagements were open and constructive, focusing on MDPI’s positioning and reputation in Poland, alongside community interest in supporting our development, with active participation across our sessions, including Q&A and panel discussions.

MDPI Poland Summit Programme

From research integrity and peer review quality to AI in publishing and the future of academic communication, the agenda featured important topics currently shaping our industry.

During the day, MDPI colleagues shared a series of presentations covering:

  • MDPI’s performance, growth, and impact in Poland: Stefan Tochev (CEO)
  • Engagement with Academic Community: Dr. Marta Colomer (Public Affairs Lead)
  • Research Integrity and Publication Ethics: Anna Pena (Research Integrity Manager)
  • MDPI Editorial Process and Peer-Review Quality Metrics: Dr. Liliane Auwerter (Conference Organizer)
  • AI in the Publishing Industry – Challenges, Innovation and MDPI’s vision: Dr. Enric Sayas (AI Product Owner)
  • Panel Session: The Future of Academic Publishing, moderated by Dr. Marta Colomer 

Poland as a Key Market for Open Access

The summit also highlighted the importance of Poland within the global research landscape.

In 2025:

  • 75% of publications in Poland were made in Open Access
  • 71% of those in Gold Open Access
  • and over 344,000 publications produced in the last five years

MDPI plays a significant role in the Polish publishing ecosystem:

  • #1 Open Access publisher in Poland
  • 17% share of Open Access publications in 2025
  • More than 12,500 publications from Polish institutions in 2025
  • More than 91,000 publications overall since 1996

Looking Ahead

Events like the Poland Summit are an important part of how we evolve as an organization. They allow us to share the latest developments of MDPI and listen directly to our researchers and editors to better understand the market and align our development with the needs of the local community.

As MDPI continues to grow, this type of engagement will remain essential in ensuring that we are not only scaling globally, but doing so in a way that is aligned, trusted, and collaborative.


With Igor Matic (Office Manager, Krakow, Poland, MDPI) at the MDPI Poland Summit in Krakow.

Closing Thoughts

Recapping MDPI Serbia Salon 2026 in Belgrade (22 April)

On 22 April 2026, we hosted the MDPI Serbia Salon 2026 in Belgrade. The Salon welcomed over 50 participants, including more than 40 invited scholars from leading Serbian institutions, alongside colleagues from MDPI. The event also marked two important milestones: 30 years of MDPI and 10 years of our presence in Serbia, making it a celebration and an opportunity for reflection.

A Platform for Exchange

The Salon was designed not just as a series of presentations, but as a place for dialogue. Throughout the day, discussions focused on important topics around publishing today: research integrity and editorial standards, journal indexing and visibility, the evolving role of artificial intelligence, and funding and support for Open Access publishing.

Program Overview

  • Opening the Salon MDPI Serbia 2026 – Serbia results and direction: Emir Ramadani (Operations Manager)
  • Update on MDPI’s performance and growth: Stefan Tochev (CEO)
  • Collaboration with MDPI – A personal perspective: Prof. Dr Srećko Stopić (Editorial Board Member)
  • Linking Scientific Quality and Visibility: The role of indexing in publishing
  • Research integrity and editorial ethics: Ana Stanković (Research Integrity Specialist)
  • Artificial Intelligence in Scientific Publishing – Challenges, innovations and vision of MDPI: Dr Miloš Čučulović (Head of Technology Innovation)

It was encouraging to see the high level of engagement and discussion with the local academic community.

Publishing in Serbia

With 10 years of MDPI in Serbia (since 2016) and over 620 colleagues across 10 departments spread across offices in Belgrade and Novi Sad, MDPI continues to invest in the long-term development of the research community in Serbia and beyond.

Some high-level indicators illustrate both the strength of the local research ecosystem and MDPI’s role within it:

  • 12,910 total publications in Serbia in 2025, of which 8,708 (67%) were Open Access (of which, in turn, 75% were Gold OA)
  • A total of more than 55,000 publications (2021–2025), with 68% published Open Access
  • 2,122 MDPI publications from Serbian institutions in 2025
  • 25% of all Open Access publications in Serbia are published with MDPI
  • More than 11,000 MDPI publications from Serbian institutions since 1996
  • More than 75 Editorial Board Members from Serbia, including Editors-in-Chief and Associate Editors.

These figures reflect the growth of OA publishing in Serbia and the strong collaboration between MDPI and Serbia's research community.

Top 5 Publishers in Serbia (MDPI #1 with steady growth)

Looking Ahead

Research integrity and artificial intelligence will remain central topics for the industry. At the same time, clear communication of editorial processes will be essential in building trust and transparency.

Workshops and direct engagement remain among the most effective ways to strengthen these connections. As Open Access funding models continue to evolve, new opportunities for collaboration are emerging across institutions, publishers, and the broader research community.

Thank You!

The excellent feedback from participants shows the value of creating spaces where ideas can be exchanged openly and constructively. Sincere thanks to everyone who contributed to the success of this event: our speakers, participants, and especially the MDPI Serbia team for their great organization and support.

Stefan Tochev
Chief Executive Officer
MDPI AG

24 April 2026
Prof. Dr. William Gerwick Appointed Chair of the 2026 Tu Youyou Award Committee

We are honored to announce that Prof. Dr. William Gerwick will serve as the Chair of the 2026 Tu Youyou Award Committee.

A world-renowned authority in marine natural products chemistry and pharmacology, Professor Gerwick is a Distinguished Professor at both the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at the University of California San Diego (UCSD). His pioneering work at the intersection of ocean sciences and drug discovery makes him a fitting leader for an award centered on transformative medicinal breakthroughs.

Under Professor Gerwick’s stewardship, the 2026 Tu Youyou Award Committee will focus on recognizing innovative and impactful research in natural products chemistry and medicinal chemistry, particularly work with the potential to drive meaningful advances in both scientific understanding and human health.

To provide further insight into his perspectives, we include below an interview with Professor Gerwick, in which he reflects on his scientific journey, his views on the field, and his vision for the Tu Youyou Award.

A Conversation with the Chair


1. Could you please introduce yourself and your research journey?

My research focuses on the natural products of marine algae and cyanobacteria, their application in medicine, their biosynthesis using genomic approaches, and innovative methods in the structure elucidation of natural products.

I received my BS degree from the University of California at Davis, my PhD from the University of California at San Diego, and conducted postdoctoral work at the University of Connecticut. After a couple of years in a junior faculty position at the Department of Chemistry at the University of Puerto Rico, I spent 21 years as Professor of Pharmacy at Oregon State University. In 2005, I returned to my PhD institution at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences at UC San Diego, where I am currently a Distinguished Professor of Oceanography and Pharmaceutical Sciences.

Throughout my career, I have been dedicated to advancing the field through both leadership and mentorship. I have served as president of the American Society of Pharmacognosy, chaired and co-chaired several major research conferences, and served as an associate editor for the Journal of Natural Products. I am a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and of the American Society of Pharmacognosy. I have trained over 100 doctoral and postdoctoral students, and my research group has published nearly 500 papers and more than 25 patents on topics in the natural product sciences and medicinal chemistry.

2. What motivated you to accept the role of Chair of the 2026 Tu Youyou Award Committee?

Of course, I am a huge supporter of all awards that are given in recognition of excellent scientific research, and especially so in the natural products sciences and medicinal chemistry. However, this award is truly special in that it recognizes scientific excellence as well as impact, and is given in the name of an individual, Tu Youyou, who clearly had many challenges along the path to reach the pinnacle of her success. Not only was she the first Chinese person to win a Nobel prize in this area, but she was also the first Chinese woman to receive a Nobel prize, and this was achieved without graduate education in China or elsewhere. It’s a true testament to what can be achieved by hard work, determination, and vision. To read the history of her extraordinary approach to discovering novel antimalarial compounds from Traditional Chinese Medicine is truly inspirational. It is, therefore, the inspiration provided by the extraordinary life and career of Tu Youyou that motivated me to accept the Chair of the Award Committee for 2026.

3. How do you view the role of natural products chemistry and medicinal chemistry in today’s scientific landscape, and what major advances over the past decade have shaped this field?

A quite remarkable integration of fields is currently transforming natural products science and medicinal chemistry. In natural products, we are seeing integration of different omics methods, from metabolites to proteins to nucleic acids. Sophisticated biological and pharmacological approaches are driving the discovery of exquisitely potent and selective natural products. Advances are being made to integrate molecular-level recognition of natural products with chemical ecological studies, and sophisticated methods of structure determination using Artificial Intelligence or pioneering new tools such as microED are being applied with increasing frequency. High-level synthetic methodologies, such as protecting group-free synthetic routes, are enhancing medicinal chemistry, accelerating the identification of lead molecules with attractive pharmaceutical properties at an increasing pace.

4. How do you consider the balance between fundamental discovery (e.g., new molecules or mechanisms) and practical impact (e.g., therapeutic applications)?

Many individuals are excellent scientists and mentors, and have essential roles in developing our culture that values science and the scientific method. It should also be pointed out that not all scientific discoveries are going to have a broad societal impact, but they are nevertheless critical to the overall body and structure of science. But it is a truly remarkable individual who makes a key scientific discovery, recognizes its potential value to society in general, and then has the skills and determination to bring it forward as a useful product. That was the type of person the Tu Youyou is, and that is the type of person who is honored by the prize in her name.

5. What do you see as the key challenges or opportunities currently facing the field?

We are on the crux of an amazing revolution in many of the sciences, including natural products and medicinal chemistry; the purposeful application of Artificial Intelligence to solving many of the difficulties involved in the search for new pharmaceuticals from Nature. AI is transforming how we select organisms for study, what pharmaceutical targets to go after, rapidly resolving the chemical structures of new compounds, identifying efficient routes to their chemical synthesis, understanding their molecular mechanisms of action, and finally, designing their clinical application. The role of people in these pursuits is changing. Increasingly, the human role will be providing overall vision: what can we do? What should we do? And it is important to remember that AI is providing hypotheses, not truth. Scientists with expert domain knowledge will be critical for discerning the correctness of hypotheses put forth by AI. Altogether, advances in technology, expanding knowledge, and the appropriate use of AI methods are preparing society to be able to address emerging diseases, such as pandemics, as well as conditions that are not effectively treated by currently existing therapeutics.

6. How do you expect the Tu Youyou Award to contribute to the advancement of natural product chemistry, medicinal chemistry, and human health over the coming years?

The Tu Youyou Award is potentially transformative for the broad fields of natural products science and medicinal chemistry as it brings a significantly increased level of visibility to these topics and their contributions to human health. It will be crucial to have excellent communication to news agencies, social media and other communication outlets so that the general public is informed and educated on the high impact of these natural product/medicinal chemistry contributions. This will bring increased funding, attract promising students, and generally enrich the interface of these fields with the health sector.

7. What message would you like to convey to the research community and the public during this open nomination phase?

This prize gives broad societal visibility to the role that natural products have had in shaping a majority of our current medicines, as well as understanding the life forms with whom we share the planet. Further, it recognizes a woman scientist working under sub-optimal conditions who could persevere and make discoveries of global impact. The prize and what it represents, therefore, inspires current and future generations to engage in the study of Nature and its relationship to Human Health, to overcome adversity, and to aspire to making one’s life impactful.

About the Tu Youyou Award

Established in 2016, the Tu Youyou Award seeks to honor those who excel in the fields of natural products chemistry and medicinal chemistry. This award offers a total prize of CHF 100,000, which will be equally divided among the winners if there is more than one, with each recipient receiving an award medal and a certificate.

The 2026 Tu Youyou Award is open for nominations until 31 October 2026. We encourage all eligible candidates to participate in this prestigious recognition, as this award not only honors individual achievement but also encourages further scientific exchange, exploration and discovery in critical areas of medicine.

If you are interested in participating, please visit the Tu Youyou Award website for more information on the nomination requirements.

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