Carnegie Mellon University Press
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Carnegie Mellon University Press
Summary
Carnegie Mellon University Press is a university press[1]. It draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (university_press category, ranking #38 of 82).[2]
Key Facts
- Carnegie Mellon University Press was a member of Association of American University Presses[3].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press was a member of Community of Literary Magazines and Presses[4].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press is in the country of United States[5].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's instance of is recorded as university press[6].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's founder is recorded as Gerald Costanzo[7].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's headquarters location is recorded as Pittsburgh[8].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's VIAF cluster ID is recorded as 311350010[9].
- +1972-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Carnegie Mellon University Press[10].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0288hjd[11].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's official website is recorded as https://www.cmu.edu/universitypress/[12].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's short name is recorded as CMU Press[13].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's X is recorded as CMUPress[14].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as Wikidata:WikiProject Academic Publisher[15].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's OpenAlex ID is recorded as P4310316766[16].
- Carnegie Mellon University Press's Yale LUX ID is recorded as group/e7608d4d-d231-4e73-8a7d-e63d6115b6d1[17].
Body
Founding
Carnegie Mellon University Press's founder is recorded as Gerald Costanzo[7]. +1972-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of it[10].
Identity
Carnegie Mellon University Press's short name is recorded as CMU Press[13].
Operations
Carnegie Mellon University Press's headquarters location is recorded as Pittsburgh[8].
Why It Matters
Carnegie Mellon University Press draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (university_press category, ranking #38 of 82).[2]