new technologies encompassed by digital humanities (DH). Underscoring the promise of democratization in public-facing history more broadly, DH projects have already brought open and equal access to databases and archives through digitization impacting
Search Results
Digital Humanities—Ways Forward; Future Challenges
Honoring David Kammerling Smith and the Digital Public Sphere; Acceleration?; Digital Humanities for the People(?); Infrastructure as Privilege; Computation, Cultures, and Communities; Digital Humanities and Generational Shift
Sally Debra Charnow, Jeff Horn, Jeffrey S. Ravel, Cindy Ermus, David Joseph Wrisley, Christy Pichichero, and David Kammerling Smith
A politicized ecology of resilience
Redistributive land reform and distributive justice in the COVID-19 pandemic
Jonathan DeVore
rightful share by democratizing ownership of material sites and means of (re)production. RLRs are informed by an ecological background theory of ethical life outlined in Section 3. In Section 6, I consider how RLR beneficiaries have fared so far during the
Online Exhibitions during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Sheila K. Hoffman
museums around the world, simultaneously highlighting works in the collection. What might seem at first democratizing is frustratingly applied to well-funded and popular museums. For example: The National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (NMMCA
Reflections on COVID-19
Marla Frederick, Yunus Doğan Telliel, and Heather Mellquist Lehto
disseminating religious messages; it may also alter altogether the types of religious messages that gain traction, democratizing the very means and message of the Gospel. Broadcasting Religion When I wrote Colored Television: American Religion Gone Global
Museums in the Pandemic
A Survey of Responses on the Current Crisis
Joanna Cobley, David Gaimster, Stephanie So, Ken Gorbey, Ken Arnold, Dominique Poulot, Bruno Brulon Soares, Nuala Morse, Laura Osorio Sunnucks, María de las Mercedes Martínez Milantchí, Alberto Serrano, Erica Lehrer, Shelley Ruth Butler, Nicky Levell, Anthony Shelton, Da (Linda) Kong, and Mingyuan Jiang
museums in relation to calls for the democratization of collection access and the climate emergency, as there is some irony in using technological advancement and expensive equipment to counter an epistemicide that is closely linked to neoliberal markets
The Case of South Africa
The Societal Impact of COVID-19
Krish Chetty
democratization of institutions could lead to a civil war for these positions of power. Ivor Chipkin (2021) describes this as not simply corruption but a new model of patronage politics. This push for political power can be seen in the growth of the President
COVID-19, Democracies, and (De)Colonialities
Marcos S. Scauso, Garrett FitzGerald, Arlene B. Tickner, Navnita Chadha Behera, Chengxin Pan, Chih-yu Shih, and Kosuke Shimizu
does not exhaust its potentialities ( Quijano 2002 ). Diverse examples of indigenous democracy reflect both the existence of and possibilities for democratizing decolonial projects emerging from non-Western ways of knowing and being in the world, as
The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Central and Eastern Europe
The Rise of Autocracy and Democratic Resilience
Petra Guasti
-ich-vsetkych-uzavretie-romskych-osad-do-karanteny-bolo-zufalo-nedomyslene/ References Bermeo , N. 2016 . On Democratic Backsliding . Journal of Democracy 27 ( 1 ): 5 – 19 . 10.1353/jod.2016.0012 Bogaards , M. 2018 . De-democratization in Hungary: Diffusely Defective Democracy . Democratization 25 ( 8 ): 1481
Rethinking Democratic Theories of Justice in the Economy after COVID-19
Louise Haagh
. “ Working Life, Well-Being And Welfare Reform: Motivation And Institutions Revisited .” World Development 39 ( 3 ): 450 – 573 . 10.1016/j.worlddev.2010.08.014 Haagh , L. 2002 . Citizenship, Labour Markets and Democratization—Chile and the Modern
Democracy in a Global Emergency
Five Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic
Afsoun Afsahi, Emily Beausoleil, Rikki Dean, Selen A. Ercan, and Jean-Paul Gagnon
suggest myriad other ideas too—from policy level initiatives, such as rent jubilees (Honig, this issue) and revised medical innovation policies (Parthasarathy, this issue), to radical systems-level changes to democratize the economy in order to give people