Wikipedia:ISSN

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The ISSN or International Standard Serial Number identifies a serial publication, such as a newspaper, magazine, or academic journal, or blog; it is the periodical counterpart of the ISBN for a book. It does not identify a particular issue or a particular article in an issue. DOIs identify particular articles (but are mostly only available for academic journal articles). On Wikipedia, an ISSN is an optional part of a citation to a particular article (adding it never hurts, but it is not strictly necessary when a direct URL or DOI is provided to the full text of the article). Do not remove ISSNs from citations.

An ISSN is particularly helpful in the following circumstances (especially when the ISSN is linked, using template or parameter detailed below):

  • In a citation to a periodical that is relatively unknown, as the ISSN can help in verifying the existence and reliability of the journal and procuring a copy of one of its issues to verify the content.
  • In a citation to an article that is not available online except behind a WP:PAYWALL
  • In a citation to an article that is not available online in full text, only as an abstract
  • In a citation to an article only available online in pre-print form (e.g. at arXiv), and which thus may not represent the peer-reviewed, published version
  • In a citation to an article available online only in machine-translated form
  • In a citation to an article that is not (or due to a dead link, no longer) available online at all
  • In relevant non-citation contexts on Wikipedia, such as in the lead section and infobox of an article about a publication itself.

Automatic linking of ISSNs[edit]

The {{ISSN}} template can be used to insert and format an ISSN in an article. If a standardized citation template is being used, the |issn= parameter serves the same function, linking the ISSN to the WorldCat database, which provides publication details and aids in location physical copies of publications.

See also[edit]