Category Archives: Collaborative Research Project

CFP: ‘Recovering Moderation’ – Special issue of The European Legacy

Submissions Due: 30 September 2021 The last two decades have witnessed increasing political fragmentation and polarization that have challenged the principles of an open society in the West. Amidst concerns about political extremism, religious fanaticism, populist challenges to democracy, and, arguably, the crisis of liberalism in Europe and North America, moderation has, in some quarters, […]

Also posted in Calls for Papers | Comments closed

TORCH research network at Oxford: ‘Crisis, Extremes and Apocalypse’

TORCH research network at Oxford: ‘Crisis, Extremes and Apocalypse’ Research Project The ‘Crisis, extremes and Apocalypse’ research network was created in September 2016 under the aegis of the Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH) and aims to illuminate as many perspectives as possible on these themes via a year-long seminar series, workshops, high-profile speakers, a blog, […]

Posted in Collaborative Research Project | Comments closed

The Radio Preservation Task Force of the Library of Congress

The Radio Preservation Task Force of the Library of Congress Research Resources Announcing the Radio Preservation Task Force, a new Library of Congress project. The RPTF is organized to encourage the preservation, research, and pedagogical application of the intellectual and aesthetic history of technology. For further information, please see the project website.  

Posted in Collaborative Research Project | Comments closed

Collaborative Research Project: SEATIDE

SEATIDE (Integration in Southeast Asia: Trajectories of Inclusion, Dynamics of Exclusion) Collaborative Research Project SEATIDE (Integration in Southeast Asia: Trajectories of Inclusion, Dynamics of Exclusion) is an EU FP7-funded project that will make use of a field research based approach to study processes of integration and exclusion in Southeast Asian (SEA) countries. By reinforcing European […]

Posted in Collaborative Research Project | Leave a comment