The website is accessible to users with disabilities, including keyboard-only users and those with visual and cognitive impairments. The website is responsive, meaning users can easily adjust font size and color/contrast settings on most devices. We have made every effort to ensure that our image-based PDF files are accessible and can be read with screen readers like JAWS. These files are tagged at a high level using an automated process. While this method is not exact, it dramatically increases the accessibility of the files as compared to an untagged version. We regularly use automated checks and conduct tests with users against Section 508 and WCAG standards to evaluate and measure the accessibility of the site.

 Accessibility specific support:

In the event that the PDF tagging described above is not sufficient for your use, we can perform manual tagging for you. We are also happy to re-format PDFs that are unreadable via screen reader.Please contact JSTOR support if you require PDF tagging, need content in an alternative format, find an accessibility issue with the website or need general assistance. You can do this via phone, chat or email.  Please include citations for any requested articles. The turnaround time for requests will vary but we generally respond in 3 days or less. 

  • Limit of 3 articles per request

  • Turn around time is 3 days per request


Compliance:

JSTOR uses reasonable efforts to ensure that the JSTOR website adheres to the following standards and guidelines.

  • Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act. This is measured by the  Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT), which is a standardized form describing how a product meets each accessibility guideline of Section 508.

  • W3C WAI WCAG 2.0 Level AA


Download our most recent compliance documentation: 

Download free document readers:

Links are provided below to product websites where you may download free document readers.

As some JSTOR content is available in formats that require document readers or players. Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act requires that those products comply with accessibility guidelines. A Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT) is a standardized form that describes how a product meets each accessibility guideline. Below are links to the VPATs for these products:

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