Arguably, Drupal is an excellent CMS; it’s used by “hundreds of thousands of projects” (from professional to proprietary to educational); it’s the platform I selected for my most recent DH project; and it’s one I’d recommend to others (it’s learnable; teachable; extensible). But I would by no means necessarily advocate Drupal over any other CMS.
Academic and corporate clients seeking digital journals or other types of web publications regularly require platforms that support standards-based XML. This tutorial explains how to customize a Drupal implementation to develop publications that enable editors, authors, and users to submit and edit content in standards-based XML, where the standard can be enforced using server-side validation settings. For illustrative purposes, the discussion references TEI XML, the markup standard in widespread use in academia.
O. Jahraus, S. Neuhaus, and F. Kafka. Universal-Bibliothek, Teil 17636 Reclam, Stuttgart, (2002)Verfasserangabe: hrsg. von Oliver Jahraus ... ; Materialart: Text ; Klassifikation: GM 4004 ; Quelldatenbank: KOBV ; Format:marcform: print ; Umfang: 271 S..
G. Fischer. Proceedings of the Eighth Conference on Participatory Design: Artful
Integration: Interweaving Media, Materials and Practices., page 152--162. New York, ACM, (2004)