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blogs.ed

Staff and student blogs for our connected learning community

Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke

Centre for Statistics Annual Conference 2024

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/mathematics/2024/07/23/centre-for-statistics-annual-conference-2024/

By Nadia Johnson, Research Communications Intern 2024 The Centre for Statistics Annual Conference highlights innovative research in the statistical sciences, bringing together data-driven researchers from the University of Edinburgh and associated institutions. The one-day event included talks by a number of invited speakers from academia and industry, along with a lunch break and poster presentation […]


Publications

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/markw/31-2/

RESEARCH PAPERS 2023 Adnan Aftab, Ali Hassanpouryouzband, Abby Martin, Jackie Kendrick, Eike Thaysen, Niklas Heinemann, James Utley, Mark Wilkinson, Stuart Haszeldine and Katriona Edlmann Geochemical integrity of wellbore cements during geological hydrogen storage Environmental Science & Technology Letters Manuscript ID: ez-2023-003035.R2 Mark Wilkinson, Kit Carruthers and R. Stuart Haszeldine Trace metals in CO2-rich Green River […]


Lecture 5: Women's Networks: Opportunities and Limitations

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/gifford-lectures/2021/10/13/lecture-5-womens-networks-opportunities-and-limitations/

Professor Hempton began this lecture thanking the contributors to this Gifford blog for their stimulating responses to his lectures. He also mentioned how it takes a village to create these lecturers and especially wanted to thank his community at Harvard and the women’s network that meets there. Dr Nash, a post-doctoral researcher and womanist theologian […]


Research Grants

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/imain/research-grants/

This lists research grants, research associates and postdoctoral fellows employed under the grants, principal investigators (in Edinburgh unless otherwise stated), and award amount (amount to Edinburgh in bold). Previous Major Funding Council Awards 2007-2012 ‘Understanding and Modelling Complexity’, three 5-year RCUK Fellowships, co-ordinated by Prof. Graeme Ackland (School of Physics) £350,000. 2006-2010 ‘Edinburgh Collaborative of […]


Draft of: Realists, Nationalism, & inter-state violence: gaps in explaining conflict initiation

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/liam-mclaughlin/2023/06/08/draft-of-realists-nationalism-inter-state-violence-gaps-in-explaining-conflict-initiation/

Realists, Nationalism, & inter-state violence: gaps in explaining conflict initiation An enduring debate within Nationalism studies is centred between Primordialists, who maintain that nations are distinct natural historical political units (Smith 1986), and Modernists, who argue that nations are “imagined communities” created by group relations between individuals (Anderson 1983, pp.6). Though most contemporary Nationalism scholars […]


Childhood sexual abuse: At the heart of problems with ACES policy, Part 1 - Dr Sarah Nelson

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/CRFRresilience/2019/07/05/childhood-sexual-abuse/

Dr Sarah Nelson is a Research Associate at the Centre for Research on Families and Relationships (CRFR) and a research specialist on childhood sexual abuse and its effects across the lifecourse. Sarah’s book, ‘Tackling Child Sexual Abuse: Radical Approaches’, offers hope of more effective, imaginative means of protecting children and young people from sexual abuse. […]


The positive effects of COVID-19 and the social determinants of health: all in it together? By Sarah Hill, Sharon Friel and Jeff Collin

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/covid19perspectives/2020/05/29/the-positive-effects-of-covid-19-and-the-social-determinants-of-health-all-in-it-together-by-sarah-hill-sharon-friel-and-jeff-collin/

Policy responses to the pandemic need to take account of underlying social inequities We welcome Bryn Nelson’s analysis of the potentially positive effects of public and policy responses to COVID-19,[i] particularly in providing an opportunity to reassess priorities. Nelson highlights the unanticipated benefits of recent behaviour changes – but we suggest the real revolution is […]


Sociality in a time of grief and mourning

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/ed-decameron/sociality-in-a-time-of-grief-and-mourning/

Liz Stanley Following a near-death encounter some years back, I published a number of things about death and mourning which focused around the ‘simulacra of presence’ aspects of mourning on the one hand, and what Elias refers to as ‘the loneliness of the dying’ aspects on the other. This distinctive kind of loneliness involves the […]


Black History Month

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/shca/black-history-month-asha-trivedy-and-juliet-richards/

This October we are celebrating Black History Month, and we asked some of our tutors who study Black history within the School for aspects of Black history that they think are untold. From influential figures to fascinating manuscripts, these sources give us a deeper understanding of Black history and why it is so important that […]


What are your principles?

https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/website-communications/design-principles-ux/

I recently surveyed the University’s digital development & management communities on what was important to them. In this post I’ll share the results and a few opinions on the value of design principles. We did some work on philosophy and principles in August within the Programme team at an awayday, and the hands-on workshop I facilitated […]


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