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public engagement --- research impact --- engaged research --- community engagement --- Science
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This book is called a manifesto because it has an unapologetically political objective. Richard Utz wants to help reform the way we think about and practise our academic engagement with medieval culture, and he uses his own observations as a medievalist and medievalism-ist over the last twenty-five years to offer ways in which we might reconnect with the general public that has allowed us to become, since the late nineteenth century, a rather exclusive clan of specialists who communicate mostly with each other. The traditional academic study of the Middle Ages, after more than a century of growing and plateauing, is now on the decline. While, at least over the next five to ten years, we will still be basking in the reassuring proximity (at conferences) of thousands of others who are involved in what we do ourselves, there is a manifest discrepancy between the large number of students who request that we address their love of Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, and medieval-themed video and computer games, and the decreasing number of actual medievalists hired to replace retiring colleagues. We should pursue more lasting partnerships with so-called amateurs and enthusiasts for the sake of a sustainable future engagement with medieval culture. Richard Utz suggests some ways we might do this, and looks forward to 'a more truly co-disciplinary, inclusive, democratic, and humanistic engagement with what we call, for better or worse, the Middle Ages'.
Medievalism. --- Medievalism in literature. --- Civilization, Medieval. --- Civilization, Medieval --- Medieval civilization --- Middle Ages --- Civilization --- Chivalry --- Renaissance --- History --- Public engagement. --- Social impact.
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Drawing on almost a decade of first-hand experience, Principles of Digital Democracy presents a unique look at digital democracy tools in action. Whether it is carbon budgeting in Canada, voting on legislation in Italy or policy consultation in Taiwan, this book explains not just what is possible to achieve with digital democracy tools today, but how to assess the life-cycle of civic engagement, as well as different approaches to security and policy implementation. Principles of Digital Democracy combines theory with practice, giving the reader an overarching theory of the components (Bestandteile) of digital democracy (e.g. ideation, deliberation, decision-making), as well as numerous case studies from around the world. Interviews with organizers and participants provide further insight into who participates in digital democracy and why they do so.
Socialism and culture. --- Democracy. --- Humanism. --- Communication --- Social aspects. --- Democratic Theory. --- Digital Engagement. --- Organizational Management. --- Public Engagement. --- Public Planning.
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EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. This important book offers practical advice for using evidence and research in policymaking. The book has two aims. First, it builds a case for ethics and global values in research and knowledge exchange, and second, it examines specific policy areas and how evidence can guide practice. The book covers important policy areas including the GM debate, the environment, Black Lives Matter and COVID-19. Each chapter assesses the ethical challenges, the status of evidence in explaining or describing the issue and possible solutions to the problem. The book will enable policymakers and their advisors to seek evidence for their decisions from research that has been conducted ethically and with integrity.
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Communicating the History of Medicine critically assesses the idea of audience and communication in medical history. This collection offers a range of case studies on academic outreach from historical and current perspectives. It questions the kind of linear thinking often found in policy or research assessment, instead offering a more nuanced picture of both the promises and pitfalls of engaging audiences for research in the humanities. For whom do academic researchers in the humanities write? For academics and, indirectly, at least for students, but there are hopes that work reaches broader audiences and that it will have an impact on policy or among professional experts outside of the humanities. Today impact is more and more discussed in the context of research assessment. Seen from a media theoretical perspective, impact may however be described as a case of 'audiencing' and the creation of audiences by means of media technologies. "This collection explores the history of medicine's relationships with its audiences, from the early twentieth century to the present. Throughout, the authors discuss how historians of medicine and other humanities disciplines have interacted with - and impacted - their audiences. Topics examined across the ten chapters include medical education, policy making, exhibitions and museums, and film and television.Historians have always interacted with a variety of audiences and there is a common desire for research to appeal to broader audiences with impact beyond the humanities. For historians of medicine, these often include: government committees and commissions dealing with ethical issues in biomedicine; journalists asking for historical perspectives on new medical discoveries - as well as abuses and controversies; museum curators and visitors; healthcare practitioners and students and sometimes even medical researchers utilising historical material.By examining a range of case studies on academic outreach, Communicating the history of medicine seeks to challenge the idea that communication between researchers and their audiences is unidirectional. By employing a media theoretical perspective, this volume discusses how historians can create impact with audiences for academic knowledge production via 'audiencing'." -- Back cover.
Social medicine. --- Communication in medicine --- History Of Medicine --- MEDICAL / History --- History. --- Museums --- Museology --- Public engagement --- History of psychiatry --- Mental health --- User involvement --- Stigma
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Autre collection voir : Houz 1008
Physics --- Astronomy --- Mass communications --- visualising astronomy --- science communication --- astronomy outreach --- astronomy engagement --- public engagement with science --- Communication in astronomy --- Astronomy. --- Communication in astronomy. --- Study and teaching --- Study and teaching. --- Astronomical Observatories & Instruments --- Physical sciences --- Space sciences
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science and technology studies --- sociology of science --- public engagement with science --- science and democracy --- Science and civilization --- Participant observation --- Science and civilization. --- Research --- Civilization and science --- History and science --- Science and history --- Science and society --- Progress --- Participant research --- Participatory research --- Observation (Psychology) --- Social sciences --- Fieldwork --- History - General
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Providing an important intervention in contemporary Irish cultural-critical debate, this collection explores how Irish women writers exercised their political concerns and influence through their literary outputs during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
English literature --- Women authors --- History and criticism. --- Irish authors --- Literature --- Literature: History & Criticism --- LITERARY CRITICISM / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh --- Ireland --- Feminism and literature. --- Irish women's writing. --- Literature and history. --- Nineteenth-century Irish literature. --- Politics and literature. --- Publishing history. --- Twentieth-century Irish literature. --- Women and public engagement.
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In the last decade, the terms 'digital scholarship' and 'digital humanities' have become commonplace in academia, spurring the creation of fellowships, research centres, and scholarly journals. What, however, does this 'digital turn' mean for how you do scholarship as a medievalist? While many of us would never describe ourselves as 'DH people,' computer-based tools and resources are central to the work we do every day in offices, libraries, and classrooms. This volume highlights the exciting ways digital methods are expanding and re-defining how we understand, represent, and teach the Middle Ages, and provides a new model for how this work is catalogued and reused within the scholarly community. The work of its contributors offers valuable insights into how 'the digital' continues to shape the questions medievalists ask and the ways they answer them, but also into how those questions and answers can lead to new tools, approaches, and points of reference within the field of digital humanities itself.
Civilization, Medieval --- Moyen Âge --- Middle Ages --- Computer network resources. --- Étude et enseignement --- Methodologie. --- Study and teaching --- Methodology. --- Medieval civilization --- Civilization --- Chivalry --- Renaissance --- Dark Ages --- History, Medieval --- Medieval history --- Medieval period --- World history, Medieval --- World history --- Medievalism --- History --- Digital Humanities. --- Medieval Studies. --- historiographical sources. --- public engagement. --- scholarship. --- Digital humanities. --- Medievalists. --- Historiography. --- Research --- Electronic information resources.
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The COVID-19 pandemic is having profound effects on all dimensions of life: individual, social, cultural, and public and economic health, among others. The contribution of social sciences is very relevant in understanding this disease and pandemic as well as its effects. It is also relevant for taking measures, such as, for example, compliance with physical distance, mask-wearing, no gatherings, and information to the population in a more efficient way. This book discusses topics such as COVID-19 in a risk society and its implications; the situation of patients with diabetes in a lockdown context; the technological, pedagogical, and social challenges posed by remote teaching; and, finally, the explanation of potential contributions of several specific social sciences that can shape both the taking of measures and their fulfilment in the desired direction. The book concludes with an analysis of the underlying social, psychological, and philosophical issues that are pandemic-related and that may have a considerable impact on societies and individuals, also highlighting the situation of the most disadvantaged groups, given that pandemics tend to accentuate social inequalities.
education --- pandemic --- philosophy --- policy --- practice --- psychology --- research --- social --- COVID-19 --- diabetes --- psychosocial effects --- self-observations --- risk perceptions --- social relations --- systems theory --- qualitative research --- social sciences --- inequality --- contagion --- social distancing --- online learning --- emergency remote teaching --- technological challenges --- pedagogical challenges --- social challenges --- risk --- Anthropocene --- modernization --- globalization --- disease identity --- deliberative valuation --- informed decision making --- public engagement --- stakeholder engagement --- n/a
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