Turning to the digital humanities
Posted: Sun Feb 09, 2025 4:36 am
Doing things right has been a function of getting data to people in infrastructure investments such as the constituent parts which now make up the UK Data Service for nearly 50 years. Discourses of quality, reproducibility, persistence and discoverability through good metadata have seen the establishment of standards which can potentially and in example, be traced through to their influence on the ‘datafication’ of the UK’s commercial and public services. We will hopefully see data as a mandated funded element of tracing the impact of research in future research assessment models.
But there are new potential horizons or discourses for data impact; new research frontiers, around the concepts of data quality, around liminality and absences, around structures, around data as australia rcs data socially produced. Miriam Posner described: “The great value of teaching DH (digital humanities) to undergrads, I’ve come to believe, is not showing them how to use fun new technology, but showing them how provisional, relative, and profoundly ideological is the world being constructed all around us with data.” The radical potential of the Digital Humanities: The most challenging computing problem is the interrogation of power
A number of recent initiatives by UK and internationally based funding and policy bodies focus on the concepts, discourses and production of the data which guide the decisions about understanding and solving global challenges:
Research Councils UK recently announced the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF), a £1.5 billion fund announced by the UK Government to support cutting-edge research that addresses the challenges faced by developing countries through.
But there are new potential horizons or discourses for data impact; new research frontiers, around the concepts of data quality, around liminality and absences, around structures, around data as australia rcs data socially produced. Miriam Posner described: “The great value of teaching DH (digital humanities) to undergrads, I’ve come to believe, is not showing them how to use fun new technology, but showing them how provisional, relative, and profoundly ideological is the world being constructed all around us with data.” The radical potential of the Digital Humanities: The most challenging computing problem is the interrogation of power
A number of recent initiatives by UK and internationally based funding and policy bodies focus on the concepts, discourses and production of the data which guide the decisions about understanding and solving global challenges:
Research Councils UK recently announced the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF), a £1.5 billion fund announced by the UK Government to support cutting-edge research that addresses the challenges faced by developing countries through.