Nice; over 1,100 Spanish-language open access ejournals, in an elegant and uniform combined directory/TOCs/article-server format. No registration required, no silly fuss about “on-campus access only”.
And gasp in awe — it has uniform-format article-linked tables-of-contents across more than 1,100 titles. Gasp again when I say it seems to be up-to-date, PDFs speed to your browser faster than a hungry ferret, and it has no broken links I could find.
Either the Spanish set up a wonderful infrastructure circa 1999, or they’re archiving by hand?
And before you ask; yes, the articles it offers (mirrors?) are showing up in Google in a managable way — and are thus now also experimentally showing up in the JURN search results. But I won’t be adding another 1,100 to the JURN home-page title total.
It might have been better if they had set a distinctive URL-string for the open arts and humanities titles, though, rather than having all types of journals sitting on the same URL-string. This means the articles are included in JURN at the price of bringing in some pages that just give a basic reference only, and not all articles are from arts and humanities titles (though around 2,000 are, both pay and open) — but that shouldn’t trouble most people searching in English for arts and humanities phrases. I think it’s a price worth paying, just this once, for such a huge ‘one-URL’ haul of full-text articles. Many thousands of which are in English, by the way.