Postagens de Rogue Scholar

language
CFPCFPs ConferencesEstudos dos media e ciências da comunicaçãoInglês
Publicados in CST Online
Autor CSTonline

The CHANSE ERA-NET project DIGISCREENS: “ Identities and democratic values on European digital screens: Distribution, reception, and representation ” is coming to an end in December 2025, and we would like to invite you to attend our final conference in Vilnius, Lithuania, on the 23rd and 24th of October . Confirmed keynotes: Cathrin Bengesser (Aarhus University) Ramon Lobato (Swinburne University of

BlogkategorienEnglischForschungSprachenBlog Series: 10 Years After The "Long Summer Of Migration"Ciências SociaisInglês
Publicados in Netzwerk Fluchtforschung
Autor Bernd Parusel

When the current centre-right government coalition, supported by the far-right Sweden Democrats party, took office in Stockholm in October 2022, it announced a hardline “paradigm shift” in migration policy.

ConservationBiodiversityPolicyCiências da Computação e da InformaçãoInglês
Publicados in Anil Madhavapeddy's feed

In my earlier note about how AI should unite conservation, I talked about the robust debate ongoing within Cambridge about whether or not we're too "AI obsessed" and are losing track of our goals in the rush to adopt learning algorithms. Jacqueline Garget has written a brilliant roundup about how colleages like Sam Reynolds, Chris Sandbrook and Sadiq Jaffer in the CCI are leading conversations to make sure we advance with eyes wide open.

Appalachian HistoryHistória e arqueologiaInglês
Publicados in Appalachianhistorian.org
Autor Alex Hall

Appalachian History Series Salt, Strategy, and Civil War Kentucky In the fall of 1862, the American Civil War surged into the salt‑rich hollows of Perry County. Confederate armies had just retreated from the state after the bloody Battle of Perryville, yet detachments and partisan bands lingered in the southeastern mountains, hunting provisions the South could no longer import. Chief among those essentials was salt. Without it, armies starved;

Rogue ScholarCiências da Computação e da InformaçãoInglês
Publicados in Front Matter

Personal names remain among the hardest scholarly metadata to capture properly, including for science blog posts. This week, the Rogue Scholar science blog archive therefore changed how it stores blog post author names: no longer as name, which is the standard in RSS, Atom, and JSON Feeds, but as name only for an organizational author, and as given and family name for personal authors.