Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke
ASTROMOVES: The Gendered Results
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/astromoves/2024/03/27/astromoves-the-gendered-results/
For the ASTROMOVES project, effort was made to include non-heterosexuals in order to include more gender categories. However, in the end, in order to protect the anonymity of the scientists only three broad gender categories were used: Heterosexual females, heterosexual males and LGBTQIA+ members. Having that third gender category is an achievement for a study […]
WEEK7 BLOG
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/s2594617_curating-2023-2024sem2/2024/03/10/week7-blog/
Archives & Glasgow Field Trip We went to Glasgow for a day of fieldwork this week and what struck me was THE exhibition we visited on our first stop: THE TREMBLING MUSEUM. I am exploring the word trembling, my subjective feeling is that this exhibition challenges the traditional classification and presentation of African art that […]
Alumni Updates 2023
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/ncmagazine/alumni-update-2024/alumni-updates-2023/
Catch up with where our alumni are now Dr Cameron Clausing (PhD 2020) is Lecturer in Applied Theology and Missional Engagement at Christ College, Sydney. With Dr Greg Parker (PhD 2022), Assistant Professor of Theology at Cairn University, he translated and edited Herman Bavinck’s Guidebook for Instruction in the Christian Religion (Peabody: Hendrickson, 2022). […]
UK Sufism collection introduction
Gary R Bunt (UK Team and Website data analysis) Anna Grasso (UK Team and Website data analysis) This archive is part of the Digital Islam Across Europe project’s collection. One of the DigitIslam project outputs focuses on website data and collection analysis. The objective is to identify, catalogue and analyse Muslim organisations’ and actors’ websites […]
Poland Team
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/digitalislameurope/meet-the-team/poland-team/
Katarzyna Górak-Sosnowska (PI) SGH Warsaw School of Economics, Institute of International Studies Katarzyna Górak-Sosnowska is the head of the Middle East and Central Asia Department at SGH Warsaw School of Economics and an associate professor in the Department of Political Studies of the College of Economics and Social Sciences. Her research spans Muslim popular culture […]
Week 1
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/clineddc/2021/02/22/week-1-2/
I personally really enjoyed Week 1 of what I am sure is going to be a challenging yet highly rewarding module. Although in some ways I was left with more questions than I had at the start of the session! Firstly we discussed the potential for digital learning to result in less IRL teaching and […]
Armchair sociology 5, Experts, science & pandemic sociology
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/ed-decameron/armchair-sociology-5-experts-science-pandemic-sociology/
The fifth in the Armchair Sociology series of informal conversations facilitated by Liz Stanley is with Gil Viry and explores themes concerning experts, science & pandemic sociology. In the UK coronavirus context, ‘expertise’ is closely associated with people who produce ‘the numbers’, and these constitute ‘the science’ that politicians say they are following. And are […]
Borders are for Crossing - Development of pillow photos from different locations.
Doing this development I wanted to focus on bringing the inside comfort from the bedroom outside to the stark and cold surroundings. I wanted to visually connate the boundaries we have in ‘our space’ and blur the lines between safety of your own four walls in comparison to the the vast outside. I think these […]
Some light reading on leadership
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/fnfscholar/2020/03/21/some-light-reading-on-leadership/
A colleague suggested diving into key reading around leadership and being an effective manager so I took her advice and browsed my nearby library for resources – one of the benefits of working at a university is that we are not short of books. I started with one of the classics from Steven Covey on […]
Retrospective on Week 7: Writing Speculative Fiction
Writing Speculative Fiction was my last intensive of the first semester and one that I most expected to be on familiar ground with. Writing courses were my bread and butter during undergrad, and the intensive reminded me of how much I enjoy workshopping and why I got started getting writing degrees in the first place. […]
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