Copyright and Licensing

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BCPHR — Copyright and Licensing
Stage 4: After Submission

Copyright and Licensing

Authors retain copyright. BCPHR publishes under CC BY.

ISSN 3068-8558 DOI 10.54111 Open Access · CC BY Updated April 2026

Authors retain copyright to their work published in BCPHR. All articles are published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license.

Author Rights

Authors Retain Copyright

Unlike many traditional journals, BCPHR does not require authors to transfer copyright to the publisher. Authors retain full copyright to their published work. BCPHR requires only the non-exclusive right to publish the work and to make it freely available under the Creative Commons Attribution license. This means authors can reuse their own work in any way they choose, including reprinting in books, posting on personal or institutional websites, sharing with colleagues, and incorporating into future research.

The CC BY License

What CC BY Means

All BCPHR articles are published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (CC BY 4.0). This is the most permissive Creative Commons license and allows broad reuse with proper attribution.

Anyone May

  • Read, download, and print the article
  • Copy and redistribute the article in any medium or format
  • Adapt, remix, transform, and build upon the work
  • Use the work for any purpose, including commercial use
  • Translate the article into other languages
  • Include the article in compilations and anthologies
!

Required of Reusers

  • Give appropriate credit to the original authors
  • Provide a link to the CC BY license
  • Indicate if changes were made
  • Cite the original publication including the DOI
  • Not imply endorsement by the authors or BCPHR
  • Not apply additional restrictions on others' use
Open Access

Free for Readers, Forever

BCPHR is a fully open-access journal. All published content is freely available without subscription, paywall, or registration. Readers can access, download, and share BCPHR articles indefinitely. There are no embargoes and no restrictions on text and data mining.

Why Open Access

Public health knowledge serves the public. Open access ensures that research findings reach researchers, clinicians, policy makers, and community advocates everywhere, regardless of institutional resources or geographic location. BCPHR's open-access commitment is sustained by Article Processing Charges, not by reader fees or subscriptions.

Third-Party Content

Reproducing Previously Published Material

If a manuscript includes images, tables, charts, figures, or substantial text that has been previously published elsewhere, authors are responsible for obtaining the necessary reuse permissions before submission and for properly crediting the original source. BCPHR may request copies of permission documentation. The same principle applies to photographs of identifiable individuals: written consent for publication must be obtained and may be requested.

Trademark

BCPH and BCPHR Branding

The CC BY license applies to article content. It does not apply to BCPH or BCPHR branding, including logos, program names, award names, and visual identity elements, which are the property of the Boston Congress of Public Health and trademarked. Use of BCPH or BCPHR branding requires explicit written permission.

OPEN ACCESS · CC BY

Authors retain rights to their work. All BCPHR manuscripts are freely available without charge. Users may read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to full texts without prior permission from the publisher or author.

BCPHR Aligns with the Following International Publishing Standards. (Click to Open)
What is PIE-J? PIE-J stands for Presentation & Identification of E-Journals, a National Information Standards Organization Recommended Practice (NISO RP-16-2013). It defines how online journals should present title history, ISSN, publication dates, and edition numbering so that librarians, indexing services, and citation databases can unambiguously identify and cite content. BCPHR follows PIE-J for its edition-to-year crosswalk and article-level identifier consistency, as recommended by PubMed Central.