Messaggi di Rogue Scholar

language
Pubblicato in BLOG ATARRAYA
Autore Atarraya

por Lucía Cortés Molina Desde los tiempos de Plutarco se ha escrito sobre la vida de algunas mujeres: relatos épicos, crónicas de vidas ejemplares. Así fue durante siglos en el mundo occidental hasta que, muy entrado el siglo XX, dichas historias comenzaron a abandonar su inclinación moralizante y su marcada predilección por lo dramático.

Pubblicato in Everything is Connected
Autore Ernesto Priego

We took for granted the good weather we did not think of it the grass grew beneath our feet between the cracks of ladrillos blood red, tanned by years of sun and rain. We did not think of it as not having a real body or the body being a stick the head was rubber, and it rode. Mine was called Silver before I knew what it meant. It takes time to understand what time does to people and things.

Pubblicato in Upstream

Bianca Kramer has been scholarly communication/open science librarian at Utrecht University Library for 15 years, and recently moved to an independent consulting/research analyst role as Sesame Open Science, with a focus on open science, open metadata and open infrastructure. Being encouraged to keep “open tabs”, has been an interesting experience - turning something that’s usually guilt-inducing (“I really should be reading this…!”)

Pubblicato in BLOG ATARRAYA
Autore Atarraya

por Eduardo Huchín Sosa Henriette Marx (1788-1863) ha tenido muy mala prensa entre la mayor parte de los biógrafos de Karl Marx: se ha dicho de ella que era «modesta, incluso primitiva», que «estaba obsesionada con la salud de los miembros de su familia». En su de Karl Marx por ejemplo, Isaiah Berlin afirma que […]

Pubblicato in BLOG ATARRAYA
Autore Atarraya

por Mariana Estrada Argumedo ¿Quién va a leer esto? ¿Cómo puedo comunicar todo este conocimiento a un mayor número de personas? ¿Todo este trabajo va a servir de algo? Cuando terminamos una investigación histórica, muchas interrogantes como estas vienen a nuestra mente.

Pubblicato in Upstream
Autori Cathleen Berger, Chris Hartgerink

In 2021 the UNESCO agreed on their Recommendation on Open Science, a consensus document of 193 countries highlighting values such as equity in open research, alongside principles of sustainability. Improving sustainability is critical from a social, economic, and ecological perspective given the global climate crisis.