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History & Policy
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To what extent is there a gap between rhetoric and reality in the commitment of the UK’s research funders to ‘partnership’ and ‘collaboration’. A new policy paper for us by the Newcastle Oral History Collective claims there is, and suggests ways of bridging it. historyandpolicy.org/policy-paper...
To what extent is there a gap between rhetoric and reality in the commitment of the UK’s research funders to ‘partnership’ and ‘collaboration’. A new policy paper for us by the Newcastle Oral History Collective claims there is, and suggests ways of bridging it. historyandpolicy.org/policy-paper...
Communities commonly participate within frameworks they did not design towards outputs they do not control. Our new @ohcollective.bsky.social paper for @historyandpolicy.bsky.social
A fascinating piece by our colleague @cathamclarke.bsky.social juxtaposing the victor’s history in the Bayeux Tapestry with a contemporary written account, The Life of King Edward, which ‘shows us an alternative ending: loss, grief and desolation for the English.’ theconversation.com/the-bayeux-t...
To what extent is there a gap between rhetoric and reality in the commitment of the UK’s research funders to ‘partnership’ and ‘collaboration’. A new policy paper for us by the Newcastle Oral History Collective claims there is, and suggests ways of bridging it. historyandpolicy.org/policy-paper...
To what extent is there a gap between rhetoric and reality in the commitment of the UK’s research funders to ‘partnership’ and ‘collaboration’. A new policy paper for us by the Newcastle Oral History Collective claims there is, and suggests ways of bridging it. historyandpolicy.org/policy-paper...
Terrific @vch-home.bsky.social annual lecture by Andrew Ziminski, stonemason, church conservator and author, on ‘Church Going - Hidden Missives from within God's Acre’, introduced by our colleague @cathamclarke.bsky.social.
Misinformation might sound like a very twenty-first century problem. But in a new opinion article for us, Rachael Haslam demonstrates that attempts to protect against the reputational damage caused by false claims have a much longer history. historyandpolicy.org/opinion-arti...
Misinformation might sound like a very twenty-first century problem. But in a new opinion article for us, Rachael Haslam demonstrates that attempts to protect against the reputational damage caused by false claims have a much longer history. historyandpolicy.org/opinion-arti...
The language of community participation now runs through every major UK research funding framework. Yet the architecture of grant funding structurally reproduces the very asymmetry in power relations ...
historyandpolicy.org
The language of community participation now runs through every major UK research funding framework. Yet the architecture of grant funding structurally reproduces the very asymmetry in power relations ...
To what extent is there a gap between rhetoric and reality in the commitment of the UK’s research funders to ‘partnership’ and ‘collaboration’. A new policy paper for us by the Newcastle Oral History Collective claims there is, and suggests ways of bridging it. historyandpolicy.org/policy-paper...
The story of the losers is full of meaningful silences and William of Normandy’s terror.
The language of community participation now runs through every major UK research funding framework. Yet the architecture of grant funding structurally reproduces the very asymmetry in power relations ...
historyandpolicy.org
The language of community participation now runs through every major UK research funding framework. Yet the architecture of grant funding structurally reproduces the very asymmetry in power relations ...
The threat posed by misinformation is an increasing cause for concern in contemporary society. But fifteenth-century records of London Consistory Court serve as a reminder that people have long sought...
The threat posed by misinformation is an increasing cause for concern in contemporary society. But fifteenth-century records of London Consistory Court serve as a reminder that people have long sought...
The language of community participation now runs through every major UK research funding framework. Yet the architecture of grant funding structurally reproduces the very asymmetry in power relations ...