Reader support
Support starts with navigation. Archive pages, topic hubs, and legacy routes can all be useful when they remain connected and readable. When something breaks, context helps: send the page URL, what you expected to find, and what happened instead.
Readers also benefit from the FAQ, the archive hub, and the Accessibility page when the question is less urgent and more about finding the right route.
Contributor support
Writers may need help deciding whether an idea fits, where to send a pitch, or how to handle editorial follow-up after submission. That process gets easier when support points clearly to the right route instead of trying to answer everything in one thread.
Useful starting points include Write for Us, Submit an Article, and the Editorial Policy.
Policy and trust
Support also protects trust. When questions about sourcing, corrections, or accessibility arise, policy pages should feel easy to reach and easy to understand rather than buried in legal language.
That is why IAS Gazette keeps policy support close to practical help instead of separating them entirely.
