
Registration is now open
Meeting sessions will be held over three days in 2023. We will meet in a hybrid format with both in-person and remote attendees.
Registration fees:
- ISAJE member in-person attendance: $525 USD
(Accompanying guest: $125)
- Non-ISAJE member in-person attendance: $575 USD
(Accompanying guest: $150 USD)
- ISAJE member remote attendance: $150 USD
- Non-ISAJE member remote attendance: $200 USD
-- All in-person registration options (including accompanying guest) include social activity, Tuesday evening reception at the Hotel Boulderado, and Wednesday dinner at the Boulder Dushanbe Teahouse.
-- Hotel arrangements must be made separately and are not included in registration fees. See below for hotel information.
-- Remote attendance is for people joining via video conference and includes meeting sessions only.
-- All sessions will be conducted in MDT (UTC-6). Sessions will be recorded and shared with all registrants after the meeting, unless speakers request otherwise.
Session topics include: strategies for editors to increase diversity and equity in your journal, the role of people with lived experience in addiction publishing, current issues in plagiarism and other ethical considerations for journal editors, and more.
For the first time, our meeting will include training for journal editors on delivering presentations on publishing addiction science. Program and more information coming soon.
For the first time, our meeting will include training for journal editors on delivering presentations on publishing addiction science. Program and more information coming soon.
ISAJE is proud to introduce our 2023 keynote speaker:
Spero M. Manson, Ph.D. (Little Shell Chippewa) is Distinguished Professor of Public Health and Psychiatry, directs the Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health, and occupies the Colorado Trust Chair in American Indian Health within the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Colorado Denver’s Anschutz Medical Center. Dr Manson is the Editor-in-Chief of the American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research Journal. Learn more about Dr Manson. |
Hotels
Accommodation is not included in registration fees and must be made separately.
- Basecamp Boulder (7-minute walk + 15-minute HOP bus ride, or 13-minute walk to meeting): ISAJE has secured a special rate at Basecamp Boulder. Registered attendees can book online at this link for stays between 3-10 September. If you wish to come earlier or stay longer than these dates, please contact general manager Shannon Gilmore. For more information on the hotel, see the Basecamp website.
- Hotel Boulderado (6-minute HOP bus ride + 7-minute walk, or 15-minute walk to meeting): This hotel comes highly recommended for those who enjoy a touch of luxury. ISAJE does not have a designated block of rooms here, but for attendees who plan early, favorable nightly rates may be available for those who book early. Our Tuesday evening reception will be held at the Boulderado.
Getting around Boulder
- Boulder is very walkable and has a robust network of (cleverly named) buses, so visitors do not need a car to get around. Most useful is the circular HOP route, which runs clockwise and counter-clockwise around Boulder. Meeting attendees will receive detailed information on bus routes to and from the above hotels and our meeting space.
- Boulder is a 45-minute drive from Denver International Airport (DEN), a major hub in the US. Learn more about all transportation options.
- The most economical transportation from the Denver airport to Boulder is the Regional Transportation District (RTD) bus, which makes several stops in Boulder (Route AB). Tickets are $10.50 one way and the trip takes approximately 80 minutes. You can also book your bus trip via Uber.
- Sitting at 5,300 feet at the base of the Rocky Mountains, Boulder is renowned for its natural beauty, outdoor activities such as hiking and rock climbing, food scene, and local breweries. Learn more about Boulder.
View Program -- coming soon |
Meet our Speakers -- coming soon |
University of Colorado Land Acknowledgement: "The University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado’s flagship university, honors and recognizes the many contributions of Indigenous peoples in our state. CU Boulder acknowledges that it is located on the traditional territories and ancestral homelands of the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Ute and many other Native American nations."